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"watchword" Definitions
  1. a word or phrase that expresses somebody’s beliefs or attitudes, or that explains what somebody should do in a particular situation
"watchword" Antonyms

123 Sentences With "watchword"

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

At this moment, though, the watchword for insurers is stability.
In her insular sisterhood, discretion had always been the watchword.
Continuity bordering on stasis looks likely to be the watchword.
Bloomberg: Forget collusion, conspiracy is the watchword in Mueller's finding.
Caution is the watchword, but action is still the plan.
"Look, I think the new watchword for tennis is transparency," Smith said.
Caution is the watchword when basing Supreme Court predictions on oral arguments.
CAUTION has been a watchword in the foreign policy of Barack Obama.
Sovereignty became the Kremlin's watchword following NATO's intervention in Kosovo in 1999.
"Vigilance to protect that which Americans now enjoy must be our watchword."
McFEELY The watchword was, end this chapter, and he started the chapter.
" So the current watchword, when announcing discoveries like this, seems to be "caution.
I think the watchword would be -- make these investigations in the taxpayers' interests.
When it comes to Egypt, "stability" has always been the U.S. government's watchword.
During this period, and for quite some time afterward, caution was the watchword.
Again, those who have discussed the question with Romney say caution is his watchword.
"Do not generalize!" becomes the watchword in the aftermath of the attacks, Weitzmann writes.
He too reiterated Mr. Powell's message: In an uncertain world, patience is the watchword.
The watchword for now is "reform" and, truth be told, there's room for that.
As a watchword for Blake's daily drawing practice, "no wrong" gets it just right.
"If you liked that, you'll like this" is the watchword of the streaming service's algorithm.
"The watchword from here has to be action," said a Republican who speaks to Trump.
Regional integration, meanwhile, came to mean more than just markets; transnational governance was the watchword.
Resistance of these pecuniary impulses is not enough — safety has to be the watchword for everyone.
For all that safety and predictability was the watchword, it turned out terrible for everyone involved.
The watchword was "unity": They should present a single front insofar as that would be possible.
JF: In the early seasons, we really focused a lot on theme and watchword and guiding principle.
COLUMBIA, South Carolina — "Electability" was the watchword of Joe Biden's first week on the presidential campaign trail.
"Pain" is 2017's watchword, thanks to a collision between Chiron and Saturn that began last December.
For now, caution is the watchword for anyone taking significant doses of CBD and other drugs simultaneously.
Critic's Notebook PHILADELPHIA — Diversity is suddenly the watchword at American symphony orchestras, and it is high time.
Understanding is something of a watchword here, as are kindness, respect and a complete lack of condemnation.
The watchword for covering the Trump era ought to be watch what he does, not what he says.
"Bubble" was a major watchword in 2016, especially after Donald Trump won the presidency in a shocking upset.
The watchword is "resist" and that means to push back at all costs, even against our core values.
Patience is the Fed's new watchword, and Mr. Powell used it at least four times in his remarks.
In 1999, I got to college and the watchword of the day among people interested in politics was apathy.
Investment and borrowing were particularly strong at state-owned companies, where efficiency is not, shall we say, a watchword.
Its watchword was "cross-selling"—prodding customers into taking extra services, to tie them more tightly to the bank.
Caution should be the watchword when it comes to JEDI — and so too with regard to our upcoming election.
"Misinterpretation, which is the watchword of your publication," Mr. de Blasio said curtly, and then called on another reporter.
Patience was no longer the watchword; violence became a way to express dissatisfaction with the sluggish pace of change.
WHEN Theresa May arrived in 10 Downing Street in July, after six years as home secretary, her watchword was competence.
"Evolution" became a watchword of the late aughts and 2010s as organizations worked to shift public opinion on LGBTQ rights.
TV: Do you have a watchword you can reveal that's not too spoilery but is something we can keep in mind?
But in the current uncertain environment, caution remains the watchword for the SNB, said Charlotte De Montpellier, an economist at ING.
Take Taiwan, which has made innovation a key watchword as it attempts to survive in the penumbra of China's overwhelming economy.
Saying the Bengals are preaching patience is a nice spin for an organization where complacency has been a watchword for decades. .
But Hildegard is determined to combine her fractured identity into a whole, and "integration" (a song title here) becomes her watchword.
So it goes with a president whose foreign policy watchword is "incoherence," when it's not outright indecency of the "shithole" variety.
A recent art-school graduate, he was simply heeding career advice that would become a sardonic watchword for young people: 'Plastics.
Extreme fire behavior — difficult to predict and dangerous to fight — has been the watchword of the 2017 season across the West.
Economic migration — whether from cost-of-living, ecosystem or governance culture, or just for new horizons — is the watchword of this century.
"Risk" may be the watchword of its protagonist, the monomaniacal Robert Merkin (a miscast Steven Pasquale), yet "Junk" feels almost numbingly safe.
"The general watchword of arbitration is that it's supposed to be cheaper and definitely faster than litigation in federal court," Burstein said.
"The watchword in all these cases," he says, "is sustainability"—after all, the Roman Empire didn't just fall, it declined and fell.
"Caution has been our watchword for some time," writes Andreas Whittam Smith, the First Church Estates Commissioner, in a statement accompanying the report .
The result is space combat that feels accessible, that terrible watchword of grognards and anoraks everywhere; it lacks the subtleties of a Freespace.
As a Trump critic doubtful of the most panicked narratives about this presidency, my watchword thus far has been: It could be worse.
On questions of energy economics, Mr. Trump is stuck somewhere in the Reagan era, when energy independence at any cost was the watchword.
Stability will be the watchword this year as President Xi Jinping pursues his vision of turning China into a "modestly prosperous" nation by 2020.
Chatter about the Clickhole article resurfaced as the Ukraine scandal grew over the last two months—a watchword of sorts against repeating past mistakes.
"Vigilance to protect things that we enjoy today must be our watchword," said Wheeler in a speech at the Aspen Institute in Washington, DC, today.
It's not enough just to call for "decolonization," a recent watchword in European museum studies; the whole fiction of cultural purity has to go, too.
Thanks to a lack of federal regulations, the watchword for consumers of cosmetics and personal care products should be caveat emptor: Let the buyer beware.
As the S.E.C. recovered from the debacle over the failure to detect the Ponzi scheme perpetrated by Bernard L. Madoff, aggressive enforcement became the watchword.
The "Knowledge Economy" has been a watchword from Singapore to Spain to Silicon Valley, which has become the epicenter of this economic and educational ecosystem.
Indeed, as the owners start to think about when they might offer their digients independence to make their own decisions, experience becomes the key watchword.
Invoking the watchword of his 2016 candidacy, Mr. Sanders said it was time to "complete that revolution" by enacting his health care and education policies.
The harmfulness of the policy isn't incidental — it's the whole point, and it's par for the course from an administration for whom cruelty is a watchword.
The "normalization" of Donald Trump became a media watchword, the idea that his daily affronts could be integrated into the routine paces of a quadrennial exercise.
In Iraq: Confusion was the watchword in Iraq on Monday, as a letter circulated online suggesting U.S. troops would withdraw, followed by denials from the Pentagon.
As protectionism becomes a key watchword for executives, a global report has suggested that companies are finding various ways to ride out any barriers to trade.
"Fairness should be our watchword: American workers, farmers and companies must be allowed to operate on a level playing field when it comes to trade," Murphy said.
"The watchword of personnel is: Get people who you want on the bus, and then figure out what seat you want to put them in," Dunlop said.
"Gradual" is the watchword as inflation stays stubbornly below its 2-3 percent target band and wages only barely keep up with inflation despite solid job gains.
Artificial intelligence is the watchword of the day in CRM with both Salesforce and Oracle announcing AI products/features in the same week a couple of weeks ago.
Change was the watchword among the opposition leader's blue-clad supporters on the last day of official campaigning, as his convoy inched through cheering crowds in eastern Kampala.
Macron, who has made reform a watchword of his presidency, defended himself, saying the comment was meant humorously and people shouldn't get swallowed up by social media outrage.
As the Democratic Party's watchword in 2017 has become "resist," Mr. Cuomo, who has garnered attention as a possible presidential candidate in 2020, has instead opted to coexist.
The Civil Rights Division under George W. Bush has become a watchword for progressives — a model of what conservatives do with parts of the federal government they don't like.
Over the past 30 years, though, whenever there has been a need to heal a rift between the police and the public, this basic principle has gotten watchword status.
"Craft" is the watchword of the moment, with a new exhibition, "Crafting the Future," opening on the opening day of fashion week at Mudec, the city's museum of culture.
"He agrees that class struggle is the watchword of history, and that workers are necessarily in combat against bosses," said René Mouriaux, a leading historian of the French union movement.
Detail in execution is the watchword of this show, and DeMarte carries it through, with compositions featuring dozens of individually photographed elements, stitched/pieced together into seamless and lively images.
Mr. Cotton has argued that senators should slow down the process and hold hearings on the bill, which he said amounts to a jailbreak — a traditional watchword in Republican politics.
And according to Brunk, the accelerator's idea of "stewardship"—an evangelical watchword for responsible management—includes notions about being a good boss, giving employees decent benefits, and reinvesting profits locally.
The watchword of the Democratic primary has been "electability," a nebulous descriptor that has captured the liberal obsession with finding the perfect candidate to oust Donald Trump from the Oval Office.
Despite all the advantages that the deal offered Tehran, the "death to America" rallying cry remains the watchword of the regime that cannot separate itself from its hard-wired anti-Americanism.
The best symbol of the industry's cost cycle is the provision of free fruit to employees at BP's giant Sunbury campus near London ("Operational excellence becomes oil industry watchword (again)", Reuters, 2015).
GUCCI G-TIMELESS AUTOMATIC $7,000 Androgyny is a style watchword at the moment, and it appears to have inspired Gucci's unisex G-Timeless, which is to have eight new models this year.
Stability is the watchword this year as Xi pursues his grand vision of turning China into a "strong power" on the world stage by 403 and becoming a "modestly prosperous" nation by 2020.
The most divisive proposal is to make membership of Schengen conditional on sharing asylum-seekers, an idea plainly directed at Hungary's Viktor Orban, who has made resistance to EU refugee policy his watchword.
"It takes a lot of gall to complain about obstruction when Leader McConnell opened the gates to obstruction, made obstruction his watchword when he did what he did to Merrick Garland," Schumer fumed.
"Venezuela has become a watchword for economic failure and mismanagement everywhere in the region," said Patrick Duddy, a former U.S. ambassador to Venezuela and now a professor of Latin American studies at Duke University.
Messaging app Signal is proud to be end-to-end encrypted, and privacy is their watchword — but its new ephemeral messages aren't being billed as tools to that end, and nor should they be.
The central bank is expected to leave its key short-term interest rate unchanged Wednesday and to stress its new watchword — "patient"— in conveying its intention to leave rates alone for the foreseeable future.
"Change" is not always the watchword of the CFDAs, where the same designers may win multiple times (in some cases, year on year), and the grandees are not above honoring themselves and one another.
Stability will be the watchword this year as President Xi Jinping pursues his vision of turning China into a "modestly prosperous" nation by 2020 and into a "strong power" on the world stage by 2050.
Mr. Wallace's watchword for the evening, it seemed, was "defuse": He posed detailed questions on policy, opened the proceedings with a calm query about Supreme Court jurisprudence and kept an eyebrow firmly arched as Mrs.
When "sustainability" is the watchword on everyone's lips, these age-old practices promise if not salvation, then at least a balm for tired spirits, and remind us that the greatest luxury is time for creation.
Caution seems to be the watchword at the start of this holiday-shortened U.S. trading week, as the World Economic Forum kicks into full gear in Davos and the world awaits Friday's inauguration of Donald Trump.
"We do see early signs of optimism, but caution remains the watchword," Chief Executive Christopher McDonald told Reuters, adding that it would be another 223.4-22017 months before it sees any flows to the service sector.
Chlorpyrifos is crucial to agriculture, and the farms using it need "regulatory certainty," Pruitt's EPA said in announcing his March 2017 decision, using a phrase that would become a watchword for his business-friendly environmental rulings.
For all the ducks and coffeepots Mr. Margolies photographed in the 20th century, he found — perhaps guided by the watchword "know your enemy" — that he could not refrain from documenting what had supplanted them in the 21st.
But with the right message and the right messenger, climate could become a prominent issue if a candidate seizes on it—think of how Sanders single-handedly turned economic inequality into the watchword of the 2016 primary.
Where radical honesty was the watchword for the first five seasons, now, Philip and Elizabeth are keeping secrets from each other, as surely as they are from Stan or their son Henry (Keidrich Sellati), either of whom could instantly ruin them.
After the universalist ideology of the Cold War era departed, Yugoslavs remembered their long-ago particularity in epic, folktale, and song, and suddenly "ancient ethnic hatreds" became the watchword of the region—though their basis in real history was flimsy.
" Fiercely resistant to the idealizing tendencies of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Hogarth ­adopted "variety" as his watchword, reveling, as Schama notes, in "the knobbly and the irregular; the unseemly and even the deformed, mouths wide open with mirth, madness or pain.
"Electability" has thus become even more of a watchword than usual, leading to circular takes in which voters tend to channel the last pundit they saw yammering on TV about so-and-so's fund-raising prowess or admirable message discipline.
Consolidation has been a watchword in the military industry for some time, as companies have argued that getting bigger would give them more scale and cost savings that can be poured into research and development, as well as shareholder returns.
Utility is the watchword, say industry insiders, as buyers who once enlisted feng shui masters to help them design cabin interiors that might feature mahjong tables or karoake areas now look for functional desks to work at and rest areas to sleep.
" Read Our Review No. 18113 Tatra Mountains, Slovakia "In 'Zoli,' a novel about the Gypsies of Eastern Europe, McCann imagines a deeper, darker watchword for this immemorially wandering and persecuted people: to be understood, even in part, is to be violated and destroyed.
For now, though, I wanted to take a few moments to talk with series creator and showrunner Joe Weisberg and his co-showrunner Joel Fields about how they constructed season four, where all the characters are at, and what their watchword is for season five.
Many come in beautiful, unusual bottles, and the watchword is variety: wild ales, farmhouse ales, sour browns, barley wine, eisbocks, doppelbocks, imperial stouts, and ales aged in port wine casks, in maple syrup barrels, in clay pots buried in the earth, in just about anything.
Ethereum, the best-known and perhaps most interesting, has gone from a wave of DAO excitement shortly after its launch, which faltered, to a wave of ICO madness and "fat protocol" DApps (decentralized applications), which also faltered, to the latest wave and watchword, "DeFi" aka decentralized finance.
While patience has become the watchword for many Fed officials, that seeming consensus was bolstered on Tuesday by Kansas City Federal Reserve bank president Esther George, among the more vocal at the Fed in recent years in advocating higher rates to guard against inflation and financial instability.
In Chile, in particular, freedom was the watchword: freedom of the press and freedom to assemble, freedom to elect our own representatives to a National Congress, freedom to trade with any nation and freedom to receive a secular education beyond the stifling reach of the church.
But the register shows how parts of the community here, particularly younger residents, have come to value any chance to indulge their curiosity, in a place that was at the heart of the original Taliban uprising in the 1990s and became a watchword for the tragedy and deprivation brought by war.
Indeed, Mr. Percoco's name became a campaign watchword for corruption for Cynthia Nixon, Mr. Cuomo's vanquished primary rival, and it is certain to remain so in the upcoming general election, where Mr. Cuomo, who is seeking a third term, will face off against Marcus J. Molinaro, a Hudson Valley Republican.
Larry Colburn, who became an 21985-year-old American hero when he intervened with two comrades to halt the massacre of unarmed Vietnamese civilians by United States soldiers in 21980, elevating an innocuous hamlet named My Lai into a watchword for the horrors of war, died on Tuesday at his home in Canton, Ga. He was 21999.
My new watchword was "Everything that's good is bad, everything that's bad is good": Things that should've felt good (leisure, not working) felt bad because I felt guilty for not working; things that should've felt "bad" (working all the time) felt good because I was doing what I thought I should and needed to be doing in order to succeed.
While it is always possible for the majority leadership to undermine a discharge effort by using alternative procedures that block the signers' preferred amendment or bill, from my experience the watchword has always been one of fairness to those who have gone out on a limb to fight for what they consider to be an important issue to their constituents.

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