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"way station" Definitions
  1. a place where people stop to eat or rest during a long journey

154 Sentences With "way station"

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

It's not simply a way station en route to Impressionism.
And, of course, its status as a way station between worlds.
But intertidal zones offer an evolutionary way-station, courtesy of the Moon.
So the rescue and even our momentary empathy is a way station.
Silicon Valley has long celebrated failure as a way station to success.
Environmentalists, meanwhile, lamented the destruction of an important way-station for migratory birds.
Every ten miles or so, there will be a little way station, a
Known as the Jungle, it's a way station filled with desperation but also hope.
"There was an idea that Tony was going to go into the metaphysical way station that Thanos goes in when he snapped his fingers, and there was going to be a future version of his daughter in that way station," Joe said.
Brazil has become a major way station for cocaine heading from South America to Europe.
Caash will end up, after moving on from the way station of the record business.
Louisiana's Chandeleur Islands, an integral way station for migrating birds, have long been breaking up.
"There was an idea that Tony was going to go into the metaphysical way station that Thanos goes in when he snapped his fingers, and there was going to be a future version of his daughter in that way station," Joe Russo told the pod.
It is not a way station from straight to gay, as it had once been described.
But at this rate, Nashville is just a way station — she won't be there for long.
ObamaCare, at best, is a way station on the way to something like Medicare for all.
Will it stop foreign terrorists from using Mexico as a way station into the United States?
The Salton Sea is a precious way station for more than 400 species of migrating birds.
Many migrants never had any intention of settling in Hungary; it was simply a way station.
It is largely a way station, where inmates spend relatively short periods awaiting trial or sentencing.
For some, a cannabis security job is a way station toward the police department or law school.
Finally, Trump may not be the culmination, but merely a way station toward an even purer populism.
Death has become a brief way station on the hero's journey in too many modern Hollywood franchises.
Temixco is an important way-station on one of the main routes for moving drugs to Mexico City.
This should represent a way station toward the punishment's eventual elimination — not a temporary low in its application.
That's partly because Americans continue to view service work as a way station, not a way of life.
Such a platform would serve as a way station for astronauts to travel to and from the Moon's surface.
Long a way-station for immigrants to Belgium, Molenbeek has been linked to other terror attacks and attempted attacks.
That machine was considered a way station to help Ms. Spoor survive until she could receive a lung transplant.
She checked on some ducks that were using a nearby lake as a way station on their journey south.
Maybe I hadn't planted nearly enough milkweed to make a wild monarch take note of my little way station?
Most regarded the office as a way-station on the road to higher things, or a rest home before retirement.
Then there's the specific construct of the 100 days as a critical way station by which to judge a president.
Audemio didn't report the rape until three days later, when he got to another ICE way station in Rigby, Idaho.
THE WAY STATION THAT BECAME A HOME My jaunts through the rain-soaked parks were stunning but wore me down.
Could one not rather conceive of hell as a way station of refinement and purification for those transitioning to paradise?
After all, he has repeatedly insisted that Obamacare was, at best, a way station on the road to single-payer.
Even if, as elsewhere, such partnerships become a way-station on the road to gay marriage, Mr Hsu is against dawdling.
The business-savvy country has used its geographical location and legacy as a trading way station to become an investment hub.
The two-story cabin was essentially a slave jail, serving as a way station before its prisoners were moved farther south.
He aspires to be a way station for men who don't get such things, but he fears his refuge becoming a crutch.
And as Macedonia became a key way station along the migration trail through the Balkans, Mr. Gruevski and Mr. Orban grew close.
Isn't it true that many progressives and liberals see the A.C.A. as just a way station on the road to single payer?
He was merely responding to a humanitarian crisis in his own backyard; the Roya Valley had become a way station for migrants.
They did not expect when they came to Roundup to be a way station on a highway of thousands of consumer goods.
The town of Grande-Synthe, the site of the two evacuations, is a way-station for some migrants, many of them Iraqi Kurds.
"The Earth is, at best, a way station to something better, or an encumbrance to be put aside, in many religions," he said.
The man lingered in the hall of a Staten Island motel that has become a bleak way station for people plunged into homelessness.
The Deep Space Gateway plan would put an astronaut habitat in orbit around the moon to serve as a way station to Mars.
The series is also notable for becoming a kind of way station for great actresses who don't have other jobs at the moment.
If I was losing my mind, or stuck in some way station of the afterlife, there would be more of a fuss, right?
For days now, San Juan, McAllen and other cities in the Rio Grande Valley have been a way station for the reunified families.
"Howard Schultz could get some traction in the Democratic Party because Starbucks is seen as a way station of liberalism," Mr. Brinkley said.
This is just one way station for the so-called migrant caravan now making its way toward Mexico, and ultimately, the United States.
Manbij, the final way station between ISIS's so-called Syrian capital and the Turkish border, is surrounded by a tightening cordon of Arab troops.
Mr. Kim opened Nazarewon in 1972 as a way station for these women, providing them with lodging, as well as legal and financial aid.
"Cabin" resembles a backyard tool shed or a mountain way station, except that it's made entirely of pale gray concrete and can't be entered.
Mr. Conlon and Mr. Postilio work long hours and mostly use their apartment as a way station to eat and sleep between other engagements.
The school, now almost ten years old, is less a training camp than a summer camp—a way-station for wrestling-obsessed young people.
At the Way Station, a "Doctor Who"-themed bar home to nothing more threatening than a rollicking liquor pour, that advice is still best heeded.
But trade flows around Singapore, a key way station for virtually all tankers from Europe and the Middle East to Southeast Asia, are a bellwether.
The popular fast-food joint next to the Hidalgo-Reynosa International Bridge has become an informal border way station: A Grand Central without the grand.
He called for putting a two-year limit on cash benefits to make welfare a way station to work rather than a way of life.
And yet, there is momentum in these works: Hong Kong was always a way station for Mr. Diao's family, which was intent on going West.
A Colombian drug smuggler who pleaded guilty in a US court in November used Venezuela&aposs Margarita Island as a way station for drug shipments.
People familiar with the "European project" will recognize that this would just be a way station to a fully-fledged European economic and political union.
He is not likely to be seen digging into a $211 omelet at the Loews Regency, the Park Avenue way station for the power-breakfast crowd.
Just 25 miles from the port of Calais, it has also become a way station for hundreds of migrants hoping to cross the nearby English Channel.
The Trump administration plans to use the counterdrug account as a temporary way station for more than $2 billion in funds taken from unrelated military programs.
Instead, it's a caring way-station for infants who may be adopted, or may go home to a birth parent, but need a safe, loving home in between.
As for the developing world, the growth of Protestantism in Africa and Latin America does not seem to be just a way-station on the road to secularisation.
But the pipeline's critics see natural gas as a way-station on the path to an economy based on renewable energy sources, such as solar and wind energy.
With drug trafficking through Venezuela skyrocketing amid the country&aposs collapse, its Caribbean islands have increasingly served as both a way station and a springboard for drug traffickers.
Browder, who has been campaigning to expose corruption and money laundering, said it was an important new development as Estonia had been a "key way station" for laundered money.
No gesture, in her carefully wrought poems, ever seemed accidental; and yet, starting in the mid-1950s, she dated each poem, to mark it as a revocable way station.
It was a very, very interesting way station along my intellectual and personal journey to try and understand what makes entrepreneurs tick and how do we understand their impact.
For example, the health clinic in Dirkou, once a major migrant way station in northern Niger, now has fewer paying clients because the number of migrants seeking has dwindled.
Turkey, a crucial partner of the U.S., is one of the leading external players in the Syrian civil war and a major way station along migration routes to Europe.
Under Trump, the pardon office has become a bureaucratic way station, according to government data and interviews with lawyers, criminal justice advocates, and former pardon and White House officials.
The postage-stamp-size yard behind our flat is a way station for cats, pigeons and foxes, and my golden retriever has been known to exercise his vocal cords.
The heavily immigrant Brussels district of Molenbeek received (and bitterly resents) the nickname of "jihadi central" because it had been a way-station of the perpetrators of terror in France.
Malaysia may seem like an odd place for a battle between Israel and Hamas, but it has long served as a way station for extremists, including some of the Sept.
Its economy, including its role as a way-station for a vast sugar-smuggling operation that is worth as much as $400m a year, powers that of the immediate region.
At the height of the European migrant crisis in 2015, Austria was often seen as a way station rather than a final destination for refugees seeking new lives in Europe.
The delays are evident here in Tapachula, the main city in this part of Mexico and a major way station for migrants en route from Central America to the north.
Space entrepreneurs are already planning travel to Mars, and they are looking to the moon as the perfect location for a way station to refuel and restock Mars-bound rockets.
And so in late May, I found myself at the Renaissance Atyrau hotel, which has become a kind of way-station for oil people traveling in and out of Tengiz.
Kuala Lumpur may seem like an odd place for a battle between Israel and Hamas, but it has long served as a way station for extremists, including some of the Sept.
Instead, the law's troubles could make it just a way station on the road to another, more stable health care system, the shape of which could be determined on Election Day.
Its Ottoman-era stone khan, or caravansary, was built as a way station for travelers and pilgrims on the journey from Jaffa, near Tel Aviv, to the holy city of Jerusalem.
But the welcoming approach appeared to spur even more migration from Central America, with many migrants seeking to use Mexico as a way station on their way to the United States.
He noted that Iran or Iranian-backed forces control a phosphates factory to the west of al-Tanf, giving them an easy way station on the land route between Damascus and Baghdad.
The latest way station in this civic journey is Subsection 11(g) of House Rule X, which outlines the arcane procedure by which Congress can pressure the president to release classified information.
There are 20 of them down there — at Phantom Ranch, the only lodge below the canyon's rim, and at Indian Garden, a campground and way station between the rim and the ranch.
For many years the Karolyi Ranch in rural Texas was the ultimate way station for elite American gymnasts, a pressure-cooker training center where young women arrived with visions of Olympic glory.
The Jamaican sprinters said they had been kept too long in the "call room," the holding area that serves as a way station between the warm-up track and the main stadium.
The result is that the nuclear-arms limits that go into effect on Monday now look more like the final stop after three decades of reductions than a way station to further cuts.
Because of its geographic centrality and proximity to Italy, Libya is a frequent way station for refugees and victims of trafficking traveling from the Middle East, sub-Saharan and East Africa to Europe.
This year, law enforcement took down another large Bitcoin exchange, BTC-E, which was accused of being a way station for many of the Bitcoin flowing through online black markets and ransomware attacks.
Maybe this malign moment is a way station on the way to a new happy homogeneity in which the people of San Francisco share the same values as the people of Frisco, Texas. Maybe.
The third flight of the pair, artfully named Artemis 220, will take people to the Gateway that NASA is planning to build, a way station that they'll visit before descending to the Moon's surface.
Intelligence showed that the men were transporting a huge cache of drugs and weapons from Helmand Province to Nimruz Province, a hub for all things illegal and a way station on the global opium trail.
It is merely a way station, a "restructuring," that allows the company's core activities to continue producing profit, workers to get laid off, and burdensome obligations (to retired miners and their families) to be jettisoned.
K Street was just a way station for him, Bennett suggested, while he waited for the only job he truly wanted — the one he could picture when he gazed out his window, down Pennsylvania Avenue.
"It would be great if they allowed you to pitch a tent along the trail as you rode," said Mr. Burns, whose bicycle shop here is a valued way station on the Putnam County Trailway.
But the budget also requires NASA to rely on expensive Space Launch System (SLS) rockets, costing more than an estimated $2 billion per launch, to build a planned orbiting "Gateway" way station in lunar orbit.
Hong Kong is the city with the largest market for ivory in the world, according to a 2015 World Wildlife Fund (WWF) report, and is a significant way station for products bound for mainland China.
Very literally, then, the exhibition lays bare the role that art can play as a way station between "neglected" neighborhood and outside development and displacement — a role that's becoming increasingly common in our contemporary human condition.
The Australian newspaper The Age describes Humpty Doo as a way station of sorts for people who commute to Darwin or who pass through on their way to Kakadu National Park, which attracts tourists and scientists.
But relations between the two have declined in recent decades, as South Korea has emerged as Vietnam's biggest foreign investor and Vietnam often served as a way station for North Korean refugees fleeing to South Korea.
The area around Caborca was once a way station for immigrants working their way toward border crossings in Mexicali and Tijuana, with only a relative few opting to try their luck in crossing through the tough desert.
"I'm going to be splitting up the family again," said a tearful Naughton at the campsite near Conklin, a way station for evacuees from the massive wildfire that has burned much of Fort McMurray to the north.
Moreover, Austria has been a major way station for migrants since the refugee crisis really took off in 2015 — with more than 1 million migrants entering the country (though mostly not settling there) in the past year.
The immigrants, the article says, will be deported back to Cuba — which served then, as now, as a kind of way station for people trying to make an unsanctioned entry into the United States via the Florida Keys.
It's a way station for those awaiting trial, a penal colony for the poor and the criminal, the unlucky and the fucked, a void of misery that it's hard to believe sits in the middle of America's richest metropolis.
But they may be missing a different game — using an elaborately built system, Alibaba is linking U.S. merchants directly to millions of Chinese customers, bypassing Amazon and other American platforms as an essential way-station to the Chinese market.
In nearly half a century as governor of Riyadh, he presided over the explosion of a modest desert way station into a metropolis with millions of inhabitants, along with skyscrapers, multilane highways and palaces for the newly rich royals.
Administration officials now suggest that a freeze would not be a solution, but a way station to a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula — in other words, an agreement that Mr. Kim would give up all his nuclear weapons and missiles.
The changes, supporters say, should also ease traffic and the stench from transfer stations, the way-station dumps where commercial trucks take waste to be sorted and reloaded into the larger vehicles that take it out of the city.
The greenroom at the Ed Sullivan Theatre, where "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" is taped, is a bland way station distinguished chiefly by trays of uneaten snacks, but on a recent Thursday it felt like Richard Scarry's Busytown.
The shale boom and the rapid rise of the Canadian oil sands industry transformed Cushing from a way station for imported crude headed to refineries in the north into a blending hub for light and heavy oil moving south.
A prestigious building in old Jerusalem which bears the name of the Grand Duke has recently been transferred from Israeli administration to that of the Russian Orthodox church, in order to resume its old function as a way-station for pilgrims.
The Justice Department became little more than a way station for once and future partners at top law firms like Covington & Burling; Attorney General Eric Holder had a corner office waiting for him at Covington's new headquarters when he stepped down.
For cabdrivers, it was a way station in an unruly city, where they could fill up, use the restroom, or kneel for afternoon prayers on one of the communal kilims the owner let them keep stowed beside the convenience mart.
The mosaic image is an arresting way station in a new exhibition, "Time and Cosmos in Greco-Roman Antiquity," that opened last week in Manhattan at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, an affiliate of New York University.
When the flood of refugees was at its high point, Camp Moria was basically a way station, one of the first stops for asylum seekers, many fleeing war in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, on their way to the European mainland.
At the height of the European migrant crisis in 220, Moria was merely a way station as tens of thousands of asylum seekers — many fleeing wars in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan — poured through the region on their way to northern Europe.
For more than a decade and a half, Al Qaeda and groups associated with it have used Mali's vast and inhospitable north as a way station for holding Western hostages, who are typically released only after hefty ransoms are paid.
The spat underscores the intense rivalry that has emerged between the two candidates in early voting states, but particularly in Iowa, which both Buttigieg and Warren see as a crucial way station in their trek to the Democratic presidential nomination.
Or Way Station, a perfect example of Clifford D. Simak's often poetic and moving "rural S.F.," in which a Civil War soldier, enlisted by a galactic federation, maintains a secret travel stop for star-hopping aliens in the Wisconsin woods.
As a way station between dolls and real women, "How We See" led to the current portraits at Salon 94 of people (and a dog) who are all close to Ms. Simmons, and are seen naked emotionally and, in some instances, physically.
If successful, Moon Express could pave a path for other companies to begin tapping the moon for iron ore, water, rare earths and precious metals, with the goal of turning Earth's nearest neighbor into a way station for spare parts and rocket fuel.
In November, The Washington Post reported that Mexico's newly elected president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, had struck a deal with the Trump administration to make the Mexican side of the border a permanent way station for asylum seekers bound for the United States.
It was not clear why Mr. Kalin had referred to Manbij, a city at the westernmost point of the Syrian territory held by the Kurds, though it might have been cited as a way station for the troops as they moved toward Afrin.
Reuters also reported from Paraguay, whose law enforcement has proven to be no match for Brazilian gangs using the country as a way station to move Andean product into Brazil; and from Santos, Latin America's largest port, where drug seizures keep breaking records.
No design is ever permanent but merely a way station between what a thing used to be and what it might yet become — a source of consolation, perhaps, if your wished-for presidential redesign did not prevail in this past week's contest.
The sessions quickly became a way station for New Orleans's modern-day all-stars: the vocalist and percussionist Cyril Neville, the trumpeter Nicholas Payton, the saxophonist Donald Harrison Jr. and the trombonist Troy Andrews, known as Trombone Shorty, all stopped by for cameos.
Every September and October, the island's dunes become a way station for tens of thousands of monarch butterflies, who stop there on their three-thousand-mile journey from Canada to a mountaintop in Michoacán, near Mexico City, where they go to reproduce and die.
Pietistic traditions held that earth was merely a way station to Heaven, and all that really mattered was the state of your soul; Reformed Christians believed that God would return to raise the dead and restore the earth to what it was meant to be.
United States military officials have long pushed for keeping a residual force in al-Tanf, where American troops have trained Syrian fighters and monitored Iranian-backed militias in the area, a key way station for Iranian forces headed toward territory controlled by the Syrian government.
The result tightens Mr. Erdogan's grip on the country, which is one of the leading external actors in the Syrian civil war, a major way station along the migration routes to Europe and a crucial Middle Eastern partner of the United States and Russia.
David Rodriguez, commander of U.S. Africa Command, describes it as a failed state that has become a way station for foreign fighters, weapons and illegal migrants that is feeding instability in Syria and Iraq and lacks the government institutions or social cohesion that would help stabilize it.
They bought a house 30 miles east of San Francisco, in Vallejo, and it quickly became our family headquarters, a way station for the new arrivals, who cycled through the cozy guest room as they hunted for jobs, working their way toward stability and a home of their own.
Many of those attempting the crossing to Europe in recent years have been using Turkey as a way station en route to Greece, but the authorities have also seen an increase in Turks making the sea journey following a failed coup against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in 2016.
The two-volume set contained some of the best works of the decade, and this year, he's releasing the long-awaited followup: American Science Fiction: Eight Classic Novels of the 1960s, which will contain Poul Anderson's The High Crusade, Clifford D. Simak's Way Station, Daniel Keyes's Flowers for Algernon, Roger Zelazny's . . .
Jack Burns the head of the team talks to a multimedia Reuters team about this project and also what the real moon mission is: a way station for launching rockets elsewhere into solar system, including Mars; constructing habitats; working with private companies on possibly mining for water and precious metals; tourism.
The idea must be for you to leave the shuffle of Manhattan behind in stages, but I always spent my few minutes in this way station eyeing the comfortable, dark, wood-clad den a few steps away where the rest of the meal is served at a 14-seat counter.
I think most of us would recognize that there should be a way for players who are not interested in college to avoid college altogether, and that, once in college, those players should be incentivized to stick around for long enough to make the experience something worthwhile rather than a way station.
Curiously, if — a huge if — she realizes the need to temper some of these ambitious plans, this offers the most clear-cut way: Build on now popular Obamacare, offering a public option for non-seniors and price controls on drug prices as a way station to Medicare for All in a second term.
British Columbia, meanwhile, gains relatively little from being a way station between American coal and Asian power plants, and public opinion in Canada — where Trudeau is constantly walking a tightrope between trying to take action on climate change and trying to exploit Canada's oil sands resources — would probably support a ban on environmental grounds alone.
Depending on their configuration, the stations could serve as a charging pad for human-piloted or fully autonomous vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft, a landing pad for conventional helicopters, or a way station for cargo deliveries or emergency UAV operations when medical and other supplies are needed during a crisis, such as the current Covid-19 pandemic.
The festival will also comprise a spring migration bird walk, in which young people can learn the park's importance as a way station for traveling species; catch-and-release fishing, with a chance to observe varieties like largemouth bass and bluegill sunfish; activities to help clean up Prospect Park Lake; and an introduction to composting, a conservation project to pursue at home.
In Syria, the rebel Syrian Democratic Forces finally drove the remnants of an ISIS presence from the town of Manbij, a critical way station between Raqqa and the Syrian border (and not far from where al-Adnani was killed.) Hundreds of ISIS members fled north to the border town of Jarablus on the Syrian border -- only to flee again weeks later when the Turkish-led incursion into northern Syria began. Gen.
But in my experience the people who do are exceptional or eccentric or natural outsiders to begin with — like a young writer I knew who had traveled Africa and Asia more or less on foot for years, not for a book but just because, or the daughter of evangelical missionaries who grew up in South Asia and lived in Washington, D.C., as a way station before moving her own family to the Middle East.

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