The MacBook line wasn't just a whiff; it was a years-long whiff.
|
|
"Any whiff of good news, any whiff of constructive news is actually going to propel this market forward," the Wall Street veteran said.
|
|
Here it was more like getting a whiff of that sensation — but being able to generate a whiff of something that intense is no small feat.
|
|
I, for one, would love to take a whiff of Central Park at noon — a whiff of hot dogs and stale summer urine, with notes of Frappuccino, thermos wine, and Doritos.
|
|
So by and large, the story feels a big whiff.
|
|
And at the first whiff of danger, he will bolt.
|
|
Today there is still a retro whiff to his ideas.
|
|
Ever wanted to get a whiff of Charles Manson's piss?
|
|
This time, the giant retailer was determined not to whiff.
|
|
There is an acrid whiff of 1914 in the air.
|
|
He's going to whiff a few times as a result.
|
|
The whiff of nostalgia won't be enough to carry them.
|
|
" He savored a second whiff and added, "That's my match.
|
|
Very plasticy, it had a rent boy whiff too. pic.twitter.
|
|
The very whiff of racism is enough to end careers.
|
|
Yes, there was a whiff of partisanship in his decision.
|
|
Yet there is a whiff of desperation in such compromise.
|
|
There's an undeniable whiff of Fish in this season's shows.
|
|
There was nary a whiff of this disappointment on Instagram.
|
|
"Ohh, that is nice," she admitted, upon taking a whiff.
|
|
He smirked at me, with not a whiff of shame.
|
|
Even a whiff of embellishment would have been too much.
|
|
Worrying about one's own narcissism has a whiff of paradox.
|
|
Sometimes there's an unavoidable whiff of opportunism in the air.
|
|
Scaramucci's sudden turn against Trump has a whiff of opportunism.
|
|
They have an air of remoteness, a whiff of futurology.
|
|
And there's frequently a whiff of cheating in their success.
|
|
And Biden suddenly has the whiff of victory around him.
|
|
Even so, those campaigns can carry a whiff of tokenism.
|
|
This concert has the whiff of an occasion about it.
|
|
And lately, fashion designers seemed to have caught a whiff.
|
|
And there is a whiff of castor oil around Broadway.
|
|
His excitement was palpable from the first whiff of chlorine.
|
|
There's a powerful whiff of maple coming off this cookie.
|
|
He knew when he caught a whiff of his defender.
|
|
The season's title, "Cult," has the whiff of political judgment.
|
|
Mr. Forsyth left the charity with no whiff of wrongdoing.
|
|
There is the stench of prejudice, not just a whiff.
|
|
Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin are adding a whiff of bubblelike mania.
|
|
Ordinarily, presidents try to avoid even the whiff of scandal.
|
|
But all of them carry more than a whiff of exaggeration.
|
|
Feehan's brilliant art imbues that suggestion with a whiff of anxiety.
|
|
Deals that do not carry a transatlantic whiff may fare better.
|
|
All it takes is one whiff of summer air and bam!
|
|
The whiff of moral panic surrounding dating apps is vastly overblown.
|
|
Plus, getting to take a whiff of an alien world's atmosphere?
|
|
Still, there's a whiff of decay coming from that glossy lifestyle.
|
|
However dystopian, that has the whiff of inevitablism all over it.
|
|
There is a strong whiff of populism to the latest crackdown.
|
|
But there is a whiff of anti-Americanism in the air.
|
|
Right now there is a whiff of it in the air.
|
|
Subtly present in these scenarios is a whiff of East vs.
|
|
The whole production, however, carries the unmistakable whiff of holiday television.
|
|
There is no whiff of the Oxford Union about Donald Trump.
|
|
That means, check even the whiff of politics at the door.
|
|
Noodles and seafood, wheat and a whiff of low-tide funk.
|
|
Name one incident where there was even a whiff of collusion.
|
|
The outrage over Mr. Weinstein also has a whiff of opportunism.
|
|
The occasional whiff of smoke drifts up to my hotel balcony.
|
|
She never came within a whiff of a breakthrough anywhere else.
|
|
The whiff of the bar's distress attracts speculators ready to buy.
|
|
It was not technically a whiff, but it was close enough.
|
|
He was so taken with the whiff of his own musk.
|
|
Now with Trump there is a "whiff of criminality," he said.
|
|
Shah unscrewed the trap's bluish-white lure and took a whiff.
|
|
But in recent years, the Lakers had begun to regularly whiff.
|
|
I got a whiff of cigarette smoke from the next table.
|
|
Investors dumped shares at the faintest whiff of tougher times ahead.
|
|
Read… Whiff of Reality at Crazy Super High-End Housing Market?
|
|
Even the mighty U.S. dollar is catching a whiff of it.
|
|
A whiff of must rides the release of the insoles' trapped heat.
|
|
At times, though, her taste for leadership betrays a whiff of cultishness.
|
|
But Apple benefitting financially is what makes this particular trade-off whiff.
|
|
Today's world has more than a whiff of the 1930s about it.
|
|
Their ongoing routine had a whiff of the very old to it.
|
|
Any whiff of compromise smells like the cronyism of politics as usual.
|
|
Trump's responses whiff instead, meandering around the question nonsensically without answering it.
|
|
That is not to say the proposals contain no whiff of bias.
|
|
Bakassi has a stately presence and not a whiff of self-doubt.
|
|
It did not contain a whiff of praise for the President. Rep.
|
|
Yet, there was more than a whiff of ambiguity on that score.
|
|
NASA's Curiosity rover also detected a transient whiff of methane in 2014.
|
|
"Smells great right?" he says as he notices me enjoying a whiff.
|
|
Women are often advised to avoid any whiff of abnegation or apologia.
|
|
"Friendship with Holbrooke had acquired a whiff of the instrumental," Packer writes.
|
|
Any business in Albany tends to carry the whiff of backroom dealing.
|
|
Often, it only takes a whiff to transport us to our childhoods.
|
|
But what it didn't summon was the faintest whiff of political drama.
|
|
There is a definite whiff of the Colosseum about the whole thing.
|
|
Wherever Clinton walks, the whiff of scandal is always by her side.
|
|
Only a handful of others — in leadership — have a whiff of power.
|
|
A whiff of lemongrass nods to Guangxi's neighbor across the border, Vietnam.
|
|
The bouquet and the flavor carry a musky whiff of sweet carrot.
|
|
One whiff reveals brioche, another sweetness and several layers of ripe fruit.
|
|
There's still a whiff of aromatic essential oils hanging in the air.
|
|
One whiff relaxes the posterior and imparts a reliable and pleasant head rush.
|
|
I was jostled and walked into without the faintest whiff of an apology.
|
|
Like a truffle hunter, I nosed around for a whiff of self-recognition.
|
|
This whiff of colonialism helps explain why many Djiboutians fret about their independence.
|
|
There is a whiff of change in the air, explained by two things.
|
|
A reporter at New Scientist recently got an exclusive whiff of comet 67P.
|
|
Passengers on EgyptAir flights often catch a whiff of smoke from the cockpit.
|
|
He sticks it into at least one butt to get a good whiff.
|
|
In cases involving even a whiff of espionage, however, such conversations rarely happen.
|
|
Once attached to Buddhist shrines, sentos still have a whiff of the spiritual.
|
|
But teenagers seem to be particularly sensitive to even a whiff of mission.
|
|
Maybe you'll get lucky and connect, but odds are you're going to whiff.
|
|
For a whiff of elegant Britain, wander through the neighborhood of St. James's.
|
|
Shattering revelations bring a whiff of hell: "I smell burning," a guest says.
|
|
In public places, you're pretty used to catching a whiff of marijuana now.
|
|
Born again, she felt a whiff of the unconditional love long denied her.
|
|
But we need to let prosecutors in at the first whiff of trouble.
|
|
If she was pushing an agenda, I didn't catch a whiff of it.
|
|
That may depend on how old the herbs are, so take a whiff.
|
|
Already, the warm weather has brought a menacing whiff of tourists behaving badly.
|
|
The sexual harassment scandals have a whiff of the House Bank to them.
|
|
The early VP pick reeks of gimmickry, mixed with a whiff of desperation.
|
|
There's not a whiff of entitlement or the establishment about either of them.
|
|
The only whiff of action revolves around the privatisation of air traffic control.
|
|
Was there, in Arbus, a lingering whiff of the poor little rich girl?
|
|
Smell the first delicious whiff of your coffee as it begins to brew.
|
|
But what we can't stomach is even the whiff of impropriety or error.
|
|
Curious if anyone else got a whiff of rotten eggs from that face mask?
|
|
It's like a coiled spring ready to react to a whiff of good news.
|
|
Carrey's a master ... although he calls out a fan after getting a bad whiff.
|
|
Trump went in for a whiff, pushing his face in between Giuliani's fake breasts.
|
|
The slightest whiff of a financial crisis will tighten the available financial resources, too.
|
|
It's a little dystopian, as it carries the whiff of a second Civil War.
|
|
And there is a whiff of anticompetitive sentiment in some of the universities' complaints.
|
|
I smelled the inside of my shirt collar, catching a faint whiff of home.
|
|
Jon even took off his gloves so the dragon could get a better whiff.
|
|
I got a first whiff of this truth as a teenager, traveling in Italy.
|
|
Each dog lifts his nose in the air, catching a whiff on the breeze.
|
|
If such discussions have a whiff of 2011 to them, that is the point.
|
|
Authoritarianism is on the rise, and the whiff of dictatorship is in the air.
|
|
Such prioritisation would still leave an inextinguishable whiff of dirty dealing surrounding sports betting.
|
|
Optimism, camo print, and wallet chains were deployed without a single whiff of irony.
|
|
He was openly manipulating me in real time, and without any whiff of embarrassment.
|
|
Blackberry Messenger isn't uniquely safe, but it has that precious whiff of Blackberry branding.
|
|
"Across the UK a whiff of revolution is in the air," The Guardian reports.
|
|
Musty memories of better times perfume the town like the whiff of the brassicas.
|
|
TOKYO — Japan has a low tolerance for anything with a whiff of political bribery.
|
|
The film unfolds with a madcap energy that nonetheless carries a whiff of fatigue.
|
|
What in the World Would you pay $100 for a whiff of Welsh air?
|
|
Whiff on a No. 1 pick and it could set your franchise back years.
|
|
We also quickly get a sense of his confidence, obtuseness and whiff of arrogance.
|
|
But you still need an element that lends the proceedings a whiff of showbiz.
|
|
He snapped off a yellow birch sprig, which gave off a whiff of wintergreen.
|
|
Traditional video stores were shoestring operations with minuscule offerings and a whiff of seediness.
|
|
Yes, there is more than a whiff of politicking in some of this discussion.
|
|
A whiff of got-the-system-rigged elitism from the Democrats will be fatal.
|
|
Even the merest whiff of a fragrance can conjure childhood memories otherwise long forgotten.
|
|
A blanket contempt for invasive species carries an uncomfortable whiff of anti-immigrant sentiment.
|
|
The present has a whiff of 26: There is a new sense of urgency.
|
|
As soon as Barrett caught a whiff of corruption, he was relentless and unforgiving.
|
|
You could spur even him to do something that had the whiff of obstruction.
|
|
The whiff of char, from scores of burned-out buildings, clung to the air.
|
|
And it's true, the whole enterprise of foreign correspondence has a whiff of colonialism.
|
|
Handmaids are always being watched and studied for the mere whiff of radical thought.
|
|
"Whoa," said Dan Barron of Manhattan on taking a whiff of the Arnot-Roberts.
|
|
When they do catch a whiff, though, what they often smell is industrial vapor.
|
|
"A whiff of Weimar is in the air," warned Gerhart Baum, a former interior
|
|
In fact, he detected a whiff of narcissism in certain displays of self-sacrifice.
|
|
And by the day, her solutions whiff less of water and more of kerosene.
|
|
You catch the whiff of unfamiliar cuisine and the twang of a new accent.
|
|
But there's a whiff of something even more troubling beneath the surface: raw hypocrisy.
|
|
Salty and with a strong whiff of fennel and orange, it somehow broke through.
|
|
Forgive him for a move that had a whiff of pro wrestling to it.
|
|
Drake's airball shot with the Kentucky Wildcats was the whiff heard 'round the world.
|
|
Apple needed a breakout quarter after its last whiff, and boy did it get one.
|
|
This one isn't a total whiff — there are quality apps in the Microsoft App store.
|
|
Woods, however, came closest among the top players to offering just a whiff of criticism.
|
|
That's right: $10 million in sales before anyone even caught a whiff of the perfume.
|
|
Take one whiff inside your home, and the air circulating might immediately elicit a sneeze.
|
|
Still, the channel has always had more than a whiff of male cologne over it.
|
|
THERE was a time when a whiff of existential angst wafted about Liberal Democrat conferences.
|
|
The first: a whiff of a chance that resulted in a rainbow across the goal.
|
|
If there's the whiff of smoldering panic, a lack of visibility will fan the flames.
|
|
You know parents: the slightest whiff of discrimination, and they sue for damages with interest.
|
|
" To Raskin, Trump's emerging administration "has the very strong whiff of a money-making operation.
|
|
All these devices, and others like them, still exude a whiff of the Heath Robinson.
|
|
There is also more than a whiff of consultant-class superiority behind all of this.
|
|
But now, the cycle from first whiff of announcement to full release has been compressed.
|
|
But unlike other recent industry mash-ups, it lacks the whiff of exuberance, Breakingviews argues.
|
|
Even just a whiff of another one should be enough to put investors on edge.
|
|
Matt Barnes (one strikeout) and Joe Kelly (four) helped to complete the whiff-a-thon.
|
|
The whiff of sexual predation will also be striking to American readers of picture books.
|
|
It's just a very squishy, badly made rubber prop with a strong whiff of paint.
|
|
The Rockies' wild-card loss to Arizona gave them an intoxicating whiff of the postseason.
|
|
Mr. Farenthold, first elected in 2010, has long had a whiff of notoriety about him.
|
|
An elective dish with a whiff of the forbidden; pretty irresistible, if you ask me.
|
|
"On the whiff you're just like, well, the stuff got in the way," Spieth said.
|
|
In other words, the vote by young Britons on Thursday had a whiff of payback.
|
|
These critics hyperventilate at every whiff of scandal in a way that only arouses skepticism.
|
|
The practice, which has the whiff of pay-to-play, inspires disapproval among some breeders.
|
|
Once K Street gets a whiff of proposals being considered, lobbyists will jump into action.
|
|
Schwartz also tried to avoid the strong whiff of cronyism that hovered over some deals.
|
|
But the façade of high-cheekboned chic is mitigated by a whiff of friendly humor.
|
|
But competence alone doesn't account for the whiff of fable that accompanies this team's wins.
|
|
I can't put my finger on it, but this grid has a whiff of banter.
|
|
But they do their jobs with solemnity and tenacity and without a whiff of scandal.
|
|
Investors got a whiff of optimism about trade with China and Mexico, and the market surged.
|
|
Even without this whiff of the supernatural, the geopolitical impact of that photo is sufficiently arresting.
|
|
His exacting, virtuosic style gives a whiff of the dominant-submissive to the composer-performer relationship.
|
|
There is a whiff of stock which hits your nostrils; the sweet scent of braised cabbage.
|
|
Even a whiff of "You should do what I do" can doom the most sincere advocate.
|
|
There is a whiff of utopia here, but it's unclear whether it is sarcastic or sincere.
|
|
I do agree that there's a significant a whiff of sexism in the Goop shit storm.
|
|
Microscopic air bubbles trapped inside rock salt offer the oldest whiff of an oxygen-rich atmosphere.
|
|
But a big whiff on the number Friday could dissuade policymakers from a September rate hike.
|
|
For now, that has a whiff of science fiction about it, and it may never materialise.
|
|
The first Apple Watch (now called Series 1) was more a whiff than a home run.
|
|
When I smell you, the first thing to hit my nostrils is the whiff of plastic.
|
|
But the whiff of personal dislike still emanates from many of her critics on social media.
|
|
The Indians' title drought gets a only a whiff of the attention elicited by the Cubs.
|
|
The scenario: Your "friend" likes to catch a whiff of her sig fig's sweet underarm secretions.
|
|
They just needed a whiff of a chance, and here it was, in the 56th minute.
|
|
In a whacked-out election year, there's more than a whiff of familiarity to all this.
|
|
He got way more than a whiff of his breath ... he got a full-on kiss!
|
|
"We're only getting a whiff of growth," said Randy Warren, chief investment officer at Warren Financial.
|
|
"Even a whiff of corruption normally spooks investors from a credit," a senior portfolio manager said.
|
|
Elections closed with a whiff of skulduggery in Haryana, a state adjacent to the capital, Delhi.
|
|
Uber shares continued to slide for the fourth straight trading day following the company's earnings whiff.
|
|
But it was really the whiff of casual sexism that tipped the event over the edge.
|
|
Jay tries to catch a whiff of 1941 by sticking his nose inside a 1941 Cadillac.
|
|
But then he gets a whiff of smoke that sends him driving from Atlanta to Florida.
|
|
Gorlats camped under it, ready to spike it home for an easy winner and then...whiff.
|
|
But they raided three Renault offices Thursday, and the whiff of trouble had stockholders burning rubber.
|
|
There's so much super stuff out there that the slightest whiff of redundancy quickly becomes apparent.
|
|
Nowhere in anything we know about Ross' erroneous reporting is there even a whiff of intentionality.
|
|
Canadians reacted to Mr. Trump's election with concern, even anxiety, but also a whiff of pride.
|
|
In the 80s, for elementary school kid, such things still gave off a whiff of myth.
|
|
Labour Party delegates are hardly crusaders, but the whiff of blood lust rises even from Brighton.
|
|
He said this week that he was less mortified by a whiff than, say, a shank.
|
|
Spain also has yet another general election looming so the timing offers the whiff of opportunity.
|
|
"Joe Biden and Barack Obama: not a whiff of scandal in all eight years," he said.
|
|
But some people said they had actually been drawn there by the whiff of political controversy.
|
|
Plenty of stores and labels offer distressed jeans, which come with a whiff of bohemian chic.
|
|
The market action since Friday is a mere whiff of what that scenario may look like.
|
|
Some of the pairings of sacred art and decadent couture gave off a whiff of sacrilege.
|
|
Consider the whiff of misconduct surrounding him regarding his unchecked power and potential conflicts of interest.
|
|
For the uninitiated, Menendez is running for a third term amid the lingering whiff of corruption.
|
|
It was tangy and slick, like a dirty Martini, with a whiff of neat's-foot oil.
|
|
Tuesday zipped by in a blur of grave constitutional tussles scented with the whiff of corruption.
|
|
We'll soon see if the solution by the Southwest states is transformative, incremental or a whiff.
|
|
A Word With Matthew Goode has always exuded a whiff of danger: the slyly wicked smile.
|
|
There was probably a whiff of condescension involved, too, given that Lesnar returned to pro wrestling.
|
|
And there's fast travel between certain telephone boxes, lending a light whiff of an open world.
|
|
The whiff of that conflict hung heavily over the next vote in 2013, which nonetheless proceeded peacefully.
|
|
It's not known as a (legal) performance enhancer and it makes you whiff like a pimp's murse.
|
|
But beware of the stocks that could really come under pressure on any whiff of bad news.
|
|
Beatrice of Nazareth claimed that even the slightest whiff of meat would make her throat close up.
|
|
But some people couldn't help but notice the whiff of techno-utopian arrogance clouding the whole project.
|
|
Still, fiancées-to-be might appreciate getting something that isn't already associated with the whiff of failure.
|
|
There won't be a whiff of anything remotely as bloody or graphic as "Deadpool" on Disney's streams.
|
|
Give it a whiff — if it doesn't smell right to you, chances are it's had its day.
|
|
With little else to offer, the Sinai operation has the whiff of an election-eve publicity stunt.
|
|
Despite the merry ho, ho, ho, however, there is a distinct whiff of urgency in the air.
|
|
Netflix just posted its first-quarter earnings, and it looks like for investors it was a whiff.
|
|
The search employed drones, helicopters and cadaver dogs, but "nothing got a whiff of him," says Smith.
|
|
But what's being tested in these experiments is quantum mechanics itself, so there's a whiff of circularity.
|
|
Winogrand's black-and-white photographs, despite their dynamic narratives, can sometimes carry a whiff of bygone days.
|
|
Honestly this sounds like Christmas: warm, fuzzy, and comforting, with the faint whiff of cinammon to boot.
|
|
The problem, besides a general whiff of Big Brother, is that the incentives don't always line up.
|
|
Currently, no mainstream party will partner with the Alternative for Germany due to its whiff of xenophobia.
|
|
But do we really want every intellectual conversation to be scrupulously cleansed of any whiff of controversy?
|
|
There's a whiff of condescension here, too, for human beings who actually enjoy talking to each other.
|
|
When you get a whiff of that distinctive, heavy "chlorine" scent, what you're actually smelling is chloramines.
|
|
Cases of dissociation had a whiff of the mystical, and doctors tended to stay away from them.
|
|
Whether calculated or clumsy, Mr. Trump's ugly pronouncement left a whiff of lethal intimidation in the air.
|
|
Still, even some Sanders supporters say the attack on Warren has a whiff of panic about it.
|
|
This gas is so potent that even a whiff is enough to stun and immobilize an opponent.
|
|
Smells of nature fill the air accompanied by an occasional whiff of the overwhelmed port-a-potties.
|
|
As soon as you walk in you get a whiff of it then it kind of disappears.
|
|
I figured every girl at school would wanna ride my dick the second they caught a whiff.
|
|
That whiff of the American exotic could also be a selling point for the Seattle-based chain.
|
|
Something has broken free in him, and it feels like a whiff of the spring to come.
|
|
Which is to say some Republicans with investigatory power have at least signaled a whiff of independence.
|
|
The scent of flowers is pervasive, a weirdly anomalous whiff of perfume amid the clatter of machinery.
|
|
An Indian newspaper, The Hindu, said there was a "whiff of the Raj" in the whole affair.
|
|
Avoid anything that has about it so much as a whiff of reflection, originality or the like.
|
|
The race's explicit insistence on defying divisions and violence can have a whiff of protesting too much.
|
|
Without a whiff of sentimentality, Messner shows how the violation has systematically eroded Mia's sense of herself.
|
|
My floorboards burned the soles of my feet, and there was a faint whiff of, well, glue.
|
|
After many years of stability under Mrs Merkel, there is a whiff of change in the air. ■
|
|
Who wouldn't prefer to simply take a whiff of lavender and feel at peace with no impairment?
|
|
It is also one that, despite its growing mainstream acceptance, still carries a whiff of nerdy stigma.
|
|
It's the latest example of an action that has more than a whiff of obstruction of justice.
|
|
Romantic Rose Teen Spirit deodorant, a note of aerosol hairspray and a whiff of cold cigarette ash.
|
|
There is a middle ground, one where journalistic judgment should prioritize news over the whiff of news.
|
|
I opened the bin lid, releasing a sudden pungent whiff of decay, and heaved the bags inside.
|
|
There's more than a whiff of colonialism about the rush of Westerners and Western money into Africa.
|
|
Still, she saw "trite" and obvious symbolism and "a whiff of hypocrisy" in artist Jennifer Rubell's project.
|
|
Dogs can detect the smallest whiff – just two parts per billion – of an explosive in the air.
|
|
But before the North Koreans could act, US intelligence agencies caught a whiff that something was amiss.
|
|
Before Mr. Trump arrived, you could sense lightness and even a whiff of relief on the floor.
|
|
As a result, a slight whiff of vapors or skin exposure can quickly become a death warrant.
|
|
The first whiff of the cultural restoration was the "Accountability Clubs" that spread across the nation's campuses.
|
|
By writing that current feminism is angry, Daum's arguments have more than a whiff of maternalistic condescension.
|
|
And if the death has a whiff of foul play, Gus might assume that Mike was involved.
|
|
There is a whiff of hypocrisy in all this, or at least a strong element of disingenuousness.
|
|
The national party has rallied behind Kelly, and he's avoided even a whiff of a primary challenge.
|
|
Manson family killer Leslie Van Houten's slight whiff of freedom just got snuffed out by Cali Gov.
|
|
Others resemble a battlefield amputation: a painful loss which cannot dispel the sinister whiff of some deeper infection.
|
|
They can be quite strong, and it generally only takes a whiff or two to feel their effects.
|
|
Price: $9.99 (Source: Crayola) Take a whiff of these new Crayola markers and you may get a surprise.
|
|
A whiff of your former lover's cologne can be intoxicating enough to derail even the most perfect day.
|
|
The nose always knows and a Waterville, Maine, dog's sniffer got a whiff of smoke early Wednesday morning.
|
|
The face the old guy makes when he takes a whiff is brief, but unmistakably one of disgust.
|
|
It's a five-door hatchback (kind of) that has a whiff of Tesla Model S to its design.
|
|
The whiff of elite self-dealing and corruption is another grievance—and in Brazil it is a stench.
|
|
To the point where a phrase like "the tweets must flow" now carries the unmistakable whiff of effluent.
|
|
"If we have any whiff of even a slight disappointment, ... some of these stocks could tumble," said Meeks.
|
|
All this carries a whiff of the Somozas, the brutal, thieving dictators whom the Sandinistas overthrew in 1979.
|
|
I'm clicking through the London directory in search of anything with the faintest whiff of a possible lead.
|
|
For all the character building you directly influence, there's a strong whiff of fatalism in the closing minutes.
|
|
Danish voters have reacted badly to the whiff of scandal, Kasper Hansen politics professor at Copenhagen University said.
|
|
Florence, a very traditional and laid-back town, just started to get a whiff of craft cocktail culture.
|
|
"If there is a whiff of a leak, I will change the whole team", he told the paper.
|
|
Nothing says Saturday morning like a bowl of Froot Loops with a whiff of a waxy, metallic odor.
|
|
But the drips and drabs of information from various emails have carried the whiff of wrongdoing for Clinton.
|
|
"Whatever existential threat the organization may have felt it was under ... I don't feel one whiff of that".
|
|
It was the day after Easter and there was still a faint whiff of miracle in the air.
|
|
"Her life had turned to this: this lifeless hush, this faint but elusive whiff of decay," Perrotta writes.
|
|
Lucy takes a brief sniff of each sample, sometimes digging her snout in to get a better whiff.
|
|
THEY SHOULD GO THROUGH THE PAIN I HAVE FELT FOR YEARS BEFORE GETTING A FAINT WHIFF OF SUCCESS!
|
|
Just a whiff of force can make them uneasy, even when the animal on set is perfectly safe.
|
|
For those of us who remember the 211 show, this sweet-sounding replacement carries a whiff of sarcasm.
|
|
He grabs me and pulls me to him, takes a sensuous whiff of my hair: "Mmmmm," he says.
|
|
If Biden's story is not treated the same way, there will be more than a whiff of sexism.
|
|
Because you see, even a whiff of that kind of impropriety puts the entire global economy at risk.
|
|
The strong whiff of entitlement coming from the top 20 percent has not been lost on everyone else.
|
|
And yet there was always a whiff of extreme disorder — drunkenness, violence and fraud — threatening from down below.
|
|
For a younger generation, practices like organic gardening and meditation may not carry any whiff of the counterculture.
|
|
The most five-whiff games in a career is just four, by Sammy Sosa from 22013 to 220.
|
|
There was the olive green tank that fired tan plastic shells with a whiff of talcum-powder smoke.
|
|
To make sure the fish you are buying is fresh, Maltese says to give it a good whiff.
|
|
First Solar pinned the revenue whiff on lower-than-anticipated sales of its solar power systems and modules.
|
|
Vega has Marion Cotillard's enormous eyes, some of her sense of sadness and a whiff of her glamour.
|
|
Italy won the championship, but with a whiff of illegitimacy after Zidane was taken out of the game.
|
|
The flurry of last-minute activity this week had more than a whiff of early campaigning to it.
|
|
A quick whiff brings to mind a weird mix of Lemonheads, my kid's cold medicine, and witch hazel.
|
|
"Surryano," Mr. Edwards called it — a clever marketing riff that brought rural Surry County a whiff of foodie fame.
|
|
In episode 4, Cardi gets a whiff of some shady comments being made about her by Swift's girlfriend, Asia.
|
|
Pokora knew there was a whiff of the illegal about his Call of Duty business, which violated numerous copyrights.
|
|
The Warriors have the luxury of being up a game, and can afford to whiff on their adjustments tonight.
|
|
After years of worrying about deflation, the stock market could catch a whiff of inflation later in the year.
|
|
And if there's ever a whiff of impropriety, "as an investor, you can vote with your portfolio," Sable said.
|
|
She walks through the doorway, inhaling the day's first whiff of stale beer and citrus, and flips a switch.
|
|
Absolver's combat is super fluid and natural — each hit, block, and whiff has a lot of weight to it.
|
|
Vanessa, whose appearance has the distinct whiff of producer involvement, looks genuinely happy over how kindly Pauly treats her.
|
|
Have you ever gotten a whiff of a certain liquor & it reminds you of the time you almost died.
|
|
Sometimes the responses they encountered seemed to carry a current of racism, not to mention a whiff of snobbery.
|
|
The KeyOne is a device from an alternative timeline where BlackBerry didn't completely whiff and miss the touchscreen revolution.
|
|
Any whiff of nuclear weapons would, in the past, have sent outsiders rushing to the subcontinent to soothe tensions.
|
|
But the mood was festive with beer cans being shared around and the whiff of marijuana filling the air.
|
|
Halaska comes back to my safe aromatic distance from the whale and invites me to get a real whiff.
|
|
So far, nobody has a clear diagnosis but financial markets have smelled a whiff of change in recent weeks.
|
|
One whiff of burning hair and I immediately pat the back of my head as an anxiety-driven reflex.
|
|
There is more than a whiff of irrational exuberance to nickel's stellar performance over the last couple of weeks.
|
|
"But if there's any kind of whiff in those numbers, we could see a spike in gold," Graves added.
|
|
I was ready to catch a whiff of Bruce Wayne's expensive cologne and feel weirdly swoony about Ben Affleck.
|
|
Berg got a whiff of his future passion from an assignment in a journalism class he was struggling with.
|
|
Along with the aroma of the sea (or garbage day in August), a convertible carries the whiff of indulgence.
|
|
Ahead, the totally non-scientific guide to what you're going to be getting a whiff of on your date.
|
|
Though interests differ and sometimes conflict, many benefit from the whiff of authority which proximity to the palace endows.
|
|
Leaves of the Monstera deliciosa plant wafted from the full calf-length skirts along with a whiff of Hemingway.
|
|
To Trump ultra-loyalists, Barr carries a whiff of the Washington establishment of which they have long been suspicious.
|
|
Mr. LeMaster's bar serves eclectic food — the pork buns are fantastic — and quality cocktails without a whiff of pretentiousness.
|
|
The last whiff in that run came with runners on first and second and no outs in the sixth.
|
|
You want a whiff of that subatomic particle's terroir before pouring it into an air conditioner or a phone.
|
|
The whiff of desperation in Thursday's moves helped explain why stocks gave up initial gains after Mr. Draghi's remarks.
|
|
I remember opening a vat of sour cream and taking a good whiff, nearly fainting from the olfactory blowback.
|
|
This display has the whiff of a garage sale (though it feels like James just ran out of room).
|
|
At the same time, Teri Shields made certain no drugs or whiff of scandal would ever taint her charge.
|
|
He lit a chip of rare agarwood from Assam, India, and slowly made the rounds, offering everyone a whiff.
|
|
In other instances, front offices just whiff in deep drafts, as the Pistons did in 2003 with Darko Milicic.
|
|
"The Saudis know there is nothing like a whiff of grapeshot to keep the Americans engaged," Mr. Shapiro said.
|
|
There's a whiff of either appealing throwback or alarming aged-ness to it, depending in your point of view.
|
|
But windows that leaked during rain storms and an occasional whiff of mold seemed to indicate more serious issues.
|
|
Mr. Gillum's defenders have said any whiff of impropriety is inconsistent with the man, and the city, they know.
|
|
A goalmouth scramble gives numerous England players an opportunity to put a shot on goal but they all whiff.
|
|
No matter your age or occupation, fall will always have something of a back-to-school whiff to it.
|
|
But the Austrian Culture Ministry's decision to replace the company's current director, Dominique Meyer, added a whiff of intrigue.
|
|
She caught a whiff of turmeric every time she passed by, with a faint base note of decomposing vegetables.
|
|
T3 has been tech-ing up the hair tool market before brands like Dyson could even get a whiff.
|
|
But as the group held its semiannual meeting here this weekend, a whiff of gunpowder wafted through the air.
|
|
Omar made a comment that, when coupled with other things she has said, had the whiff of anti-Semitism.
|
|
To that, one might expect at least a faint whiff of patriotism from his Republican questioners on the committee.
|
|
It is applicable to the Iranian regime, whose legitimacy would be undermined by permitting even a whiff of freedom.
|
|
It also represents a whiff for PE-backed Vivid Seats, which for months had seemed to be the favorite.
|
|
It smelled of passion fruit mixed with the slight whiff of pot, but the whole thing looked too runny.
|
|
After being in the public arena of 36 years without a hint, a whiff of an allegation like this.
|
|
And even in Rivera and Van Susteren's apologies, there's still a whiff of reluctance, a dash of lingering skepticism.
|
|
"The whiff of scandal was the reason Sam wasn't given the England job," reads the Daily Mail headline, which was printed a full ten years before the Sam in question, Sam Allardyce, was in fact given the England job and then fired after one game for more than a "whiff" of scandal.
|
|
Gizmodo had a chance to take a whiff of the stuff this week at the SynBioBeta conference in San Francisco.
|
|
With more than a whiff of schadenfreude, Italy certainly seems to be enjoying not being the center of Europe's attention.
|
|
Guidance cuts from some of Apple's suppliers gave investors the first whiff of bad news regarding the company's iPhone sales.
|
|
Harry, 34, caused the staff to giggle when he lifted the moccasins to his nose to catch a quick whiff.
|
|
And that sets up a question: How did the pollsters so badly whiff on an election with such high stakes?
|
|
INSURANCE is banking's boring cousin: it lacks the glamour, the sky-high bonuses and the ever-present whiff of danger.
|
|
And just as the Democrats were once the party of graft, so the whiff of shameless materialism sticks to Trump.
|
|
Well, you might not actually be able to tell, unless you ask someone else to take a quick whiff. Why?
|
|
I'd never heard of anorexia or bulimia before going to Westminster, but I soon got a strong whiff of it.
|
|
To those scouring his rants for an ideological thread, this seemed in line with the isolationist whiff of America First.
|
|
As the cops approached the Jirons' truck, they immediately caught a whiff of weed and opted to search the vehicle.
|
|
NASA scientists got an unexpected bonus when, in 2013, Curiosity got a big whiff of methane in the Martian air.
|
|
It is often heard by women, though, as carrying a whiff of surprise that a woman would show such spirit.
|
|
But what if her frenemy from accounting comes in to powder her nose, takes a whiff, and hears a drop?
|
|
His is a social-justice strain of Catholicism, with a whiff of Latin America and of Pope Francis to it.
|
|
The first was more bitterly toxic (my mother got a whiff of its vulgarity and forbade it) than the second.
|
|
More Jackie O. than J. Lo, it trails a whiff of old money laced with a dose of common sense.
|
|
But they have also brought a whiff of the campaign back to Sevnica, where they now own a handsome house.
|
|
By the time I got to Greenwich, I was sure that I'd finally get a whiff of my former self.
|
|
The endless U.S. deployment in Afghanistan carries the whiff of Vietnam in its inability to resolve that country's civil war.
|
|
Related: Whimsically Chill Nudes Bring Back a Whiff of Summer This Artist Gave Colorful Parrots Elegant Legs, Because Why Not?
|
|
A whiff of California medical-grade weed jolts the air as Portorreal makes an observation about the heavy police presence.
|
|
Agnostics have it rough in American culture; their refusal to take a stand has the whiff of cowardice or laziness.
|
|
And yet there was a rebellious whiff of "Why should we even care about this other America" in the air.
|
|
There's a whiff of Hollywood salesmanship too in the way Rader positions the pair as a kind of Bette vs.
|
|
House Republicans caved with just the whiff of industry pressure in 2017, quickly pulling such a provision from their plan.
|
|
Critic's Pick Julia Jarcho's new play is a squirmy, sinister meditation on female desire, with a whiff of ancient Greece.
|
|
Beyond sports, the decision carried the whiff of history, when Olympic playing fields were an extension of Cold War battlefields.
|
|
The full text, appended below, doesn't contain a single whiff of apology (aside from pro forma praise for America's spies).
|
|
Mr. Shumate insisted that previous officeholders had engaged in the same type of behavior without a whiff of public controversy.
|
|
Despite efforts to sanitize them or give them a feminist slant, a whiff of something disreputable lingers, something slightly kinky.
|
|
Along the charcoal-colored walls, armies of classical statuary and framed plaster intaglios offered a whiff of the Grand Tour.
|
|
And she is hypersensitive to allergens — the slightest whiff of smoke, chemicals or perfume can cause her throat to close.
|
|
The steam brought a faint piney whiff of galangal, and lemongrass and kaffir-lime leaves like stray shafts of sun.
|
|
"Many people in these countries have seen a whiff of what it's like to have a better life," she said.
|
|
In each case at the Grey Art Gallery, you get a whiff of what it was like to be there.
|
|
Her version of the story, A.O. Scott wrote in his review for The Times, has "a whiff of tabloid incredulity."
|
|
While Bautista is worth a try, the Mets are basing their guarded optimism only on a whiff of a sample.
|
|
Usually I get a whiff of the lingering smell of baked bread from the Fordham Road Bakery around the corner.
|
|
They know that even a whiff of ulterior political motives will scare away Republican participation and undermine the investigation's legitimacy.
|
|
A whiff of strawberry enhances the pastry cream between the delicate layers and a shimmering Champagne gelée paves the top.
|
|
Beyond the spectacle the art traffics in, there's a whiff of hypocrisy to the project that I can't quite shake.
|
|
A tie-up with the Greens would at least spare Kurz the whiff of scandal that could accompany the FPO.
|
|
BREAKFAST BROWSE The sweet whiff of opportunity One Chesapeake Bay retriever couldn't quite hack it as a drug-sniffing dog.
|
|
You get a whiff of Truffaut, and a strong sense that none of the grownups can match that gliding ease.
|
|
The Brussels-based choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker opens the Baryshnikov Arts Center's new season with a whiff of romance.
|
|
The plan — to basically get a special election do-over with a different candidate — has the whiff of the undemocratic.
|
|
There's a whiff of the old video game arguments over massively multiplayer online games and what constitutes success or failure.
|
|
Denying us any whiff of the violence to come, Dumont celebrates the innocence — and banality — of a young saint's life.
|
|
But if you were to take a whiff, you'd first notice the scent of goat cheese left out in the sun.
|
|
A whiff would allow you to understand why some call noni "the cheese fruit," though frankly, that's an insult to cheese.
|
|
As I pulled up, I detected a faint whiff of a spice that I could not quite give a name to.
|
|
Haluk Ozkan told the BBC he was standing outside the subway station when he got a whiff of "burning rubber" smell.
|
|
Any game with even a whiff of artistic integrity gets held up as a poster boy for video games as art.
|
|
There was a whiff of "Oh, good, here are a bunch of teenagers to do the hard work" to these statements.
|
|
Elvis, who died ignominiously less than 10 years after his first Vegas residency, arguably put the whiff of doom on it.
|
|
In Kinston, a sternly conservative corner of a vital swing state, those complaints were joined by a strong whiff of conspiracy.
|
|
But it was only after days of frenzied speculation that a whiff of fact could be discerned through the dense smoke.
|
|
Secondly, there isn't a whiff of that "tanning scent" anywhere, thanks to the formula's cucumber and eucalyptus, which is mega refreshing.
|
|
On Saturday, Khaleesi and Ramos were outside tracking animals, when the dog got a whiff of a rabbit and started running.
|
|
With a mild whiff of desperation, Mr Thiam even proposed floating Credit Suisse's sturdy domestic bank, an idea he later ditched.
|
|
Will our beloved Love Actually and 30 Rock be returned to us once Netflix gets a whiff of the Thanksgiving spirit?
|
|
If he gets the chance, here's hoping the wind will have blown away the lingering whiff of this stinker by then.
|
|
That conclusion has an ominous whiff of an upcoming episode of Black Mirror to it, but it also makes perfect sense.
|
|
Fans still trying to get a whiff of Kim shouldn't be discouraged though ... her signature scent crystal gardenia is still available.
|
|
But he also needed to avoid being tainted by the whiff of scandal that hung stubbornly around Tammany – and the Mafia.
|
|
Barbour instructs them to lift the garments out of the bags, raise them to their nostrils, and take a big whiff.
|
|
Any time the whiff of an idol enters the game, people are much more cautious about where they place their votes.
|
|
But the overall whiff of bigotry is undeniable, exhibited most recently in Wednesday's confusion over Trump's phone call with Peña Nieto.
|
|
Besides, an occasional whiff of fragrance is a small price to pay for long-lasting, second-day (even third-day) perfection.
|
|
Still, former diplomats say the atmosphere in Washington over anything that carries even a whiff of Russia is out of control.
|
|
"McCarthyism" has become a common—indeed too common—accusation today, wielded across the political spectrum whenever there's a whiff of overreach.
|
|
Every so often, though, a whiff of the "wonderful mystical magical miracle" (to borrow a phrase from Leona) stirs the air.
|
|
He was also sometimes reticent and required a whiff of pheromones from a cup of thawed mare urine to become interested.
|
|
A whiff of your favorite food, the summer breeze or a special soap can make you think of your childhood home.
|
|
You get a whiff of somebody's essence, whether you wanted it or not, and that's enough to write a whole character.
|
|
Long on bombast and short on details, Ms. Leitch's Canadian values proposition has a certain Donald Trump-like whiff to it.
|
|
A whiff of a hot, gooey, cheesesteak will always be associated with cheering on the Phillies at baseball games with Dad.
|
|
Just a whiff should be more than enough for an American president-to-be to demand an immediate investigation by Congress.
|
|
ATLANTA — This is not your mother's "Dynasty," with its power suits, Bill Conti trumpet riff and bracing whiff of Giorgio perfume.
|
|
" The jellied slices, he wrote, go "down easy, like a slippery jam, potent with berry flavor and a whiff of history.
|
|
We find ourselves newly contextualizing earlier encounters among Katy, Paul and Toni, which had a whiff of sexual and professional condescension.
|
|
His desperation kick turned into a whiff and Real Madrid's Karim Benzema scored one of the easiest goals of his life.
|
|
Soft and pale, their flavor is deep and elegant and almost nutty, with a whiff of something akin to savory marzipan.
|
|
Any whiff of equivocation about Castro can hurt candidates among Cuban Americans, who make up a significant voting bloc in Florida.
|
|
PHILADELPHIA — Saturday afternoon was sparkling here: one of those early autumn days with not a whiff of fall in the air.
|
|
So in about two weeks she put together some men's looks: bright, shiny trifles with a whiff of vintage about them.
|
|
The two women are ostensibly more moderate than Mr. Le Pen; their rhetoric nevertheless carries more than a whiff of racism.
|
|
"Good vintage smells a wee bit musty, but more like a whiff of wool or your grandmother's attic," Ms. McDonnell said.
|
|
Yet he didn't carry the "here we go again" ennui or whiff of wariness that often permeates the air around celebrities.
|
|
The air stung our throats and our eyes—not severely, but like a whiff of tear gas carried on a breeze.
|
|
A whiff of entitlement from any guest was enough reason to be kicked out, and that was part of the allure.
|
|
There is a whiff of it in the country's post-revolutionary politics as a whole, whether from left, right or center.
|
|
This is ultimately a play about the balm of friendship, and there's not a whiff of sappiness or condescension to it.
|
|
There's a wild urgency, a defiant sexiness to these moments, which carries a whiff or two of the choreographer Twyla Tharp.
|
|
This may not be the muscular tonkotsu ramen, with a whiff of the barnyard, found at ramen shrines elsewhere in town.
|
|
These molecules offer a whiff of who we are, revealing age, genetics, lifestyle, hometown — even metabolic processes that underlie our health.
|
|
Whenever a game anywhere features crafting, or customized player creations, you can smell the whiff of Minecraft's influence in the air.
|
|
The ad ("Artists to Work Overseas — U.S. Navy Civilians") did not identify the employer, but it carried the whiff of adventure.
|
|
Too busy for lunch, or too scared that Hot Tom from accounts might catch a whiff of those sardines on toast?
|
|
Some science fiction fans despise any whiff of fantasy, but for Anders, both science and magic help express her view of reality.
|
|
It's about giving us the whiff, the suggestion of something that has a very high price tag that someone else paid for.
|
|
Morton's whiff rate this year is in line with the new normal he established in a breakout campaign with Philadelphia last season.
|
|
It's the kind of old-fashioned monkeyshine that, under the menacing sousveillance of social media, now carries the whiff of oh shit.
|
|
And when you open the top compartment to get something out, you won't get a whiff of foot sweat from your shoes.
|
|
Lents said people shouldn't be afraid to ask their bartender if they can take a whiff from the bottle they're drinking from.
|
|
You're free to guess at these, but a whiff means you miss out on the ability to raise your knowledge social stat.
|
|
Maybe poppers really did start as a leather cleaner, and some fisting pig decided to take a whiff while cleaning his chaps?
|
|
But giving yet more currency to those that have the most has a whiff of plutocracy about it, and many users object.
|
|
Despite the whiff of royal electioneering, the PJD found its way to victory, increasing its seats in parliament from 107 to 125.
|
|
I smuggled just enough home so when I open my fridge in my Brooklyn apartment I get a heady whiff of Comté.
|
|
She, Kendall and Landisio began searching databases, trying to find some whiff of him, while Cuddy muttered to herself: ''Don't get frustrated.
|
|
In the meantime, none of the other detectors set up to find dark matter has caught even a whiff of the stuff.
|
|
Such moments underscore the overall whiff of decay, of a ruling class so over the top that nothing works as it should.
|
|
Filiz Polat, of the opposition Greens, detects a whiff of hostility to foreigners in the resistance to establishing a more generous regime.
|
|
But even the slightest whiff that Glencore is abetting sanctions-busting will jangle the nerves of the compliance department of its banks.
|
|
Smelling sweat on a crowded train might make you go "ew," but a whiff of it at a gym is just fine.
|
|
That means any match-up, even one where the Rogue should be favored, can go south if the Burgles and Hucksters whiff.
|
|
According to the Elias Sports Bureau, he is one whiff shy of matching Rick Ankiel's 2013 major league record for non-pitchers.
|
|
Ohtani's strikeout rate is nearly 30 percent, making him one of the 30 or so more whiff-prone hitters in the game.
|
|
" He added, "She strikes a balance of confidence without a whiff of over confidence and a kind of humility that's entirely unformed.
|
|
Ahead are the common odors that you need to be aware of, and what it might mean if you catch a whiff.
|
|
We then took a whiff of the tea as it was steeping, which smelled like a glass of warm, full-fat milk.
|
|
But at the first whiff of trouble it tends to lose its nerve, building up much bigger problems a few years hence.
|
|
The color is deliberately blotchy, and the drawing, with its tubular arms and fingers, has the unmistakable whiff of a Nickelodeon cartoon.
|
|
While there is the distinct whiff of trolling here, the fallout is a testament to how how protective people are over pizza.
|
|
Grab yourself a fat slab and take a good whiff—you're going to like the way it smells, I guarantee it™.
|
|
Eastern European allies are particularly suspicious about anything that might push America away—or worse, give Russia a whiff of Western weakness.
|
|
It sends him into ecstasies of rage, this whiff of fear coming off the being on the other side of the gate.
|
|
Fennel grows wild here, and its pollen has the refreshing whiff of dried sage, with notes of saffron, lemon and fennel seed.
|
|
Amanda handed me the first sandwich and I did my best to get a good whiff from underneath my googly-eye glasses.
|
|
A hugely expensive free-for-all, studded with celebrities (or what passes for celebrities in Washington) — with a whiff of dirty tricks.
|
|
Mark Trumbo will periodically make up for his imposing whiff totals by smashing a ball into/through the warehouse at Camden Yards.
|
|
Throughout it all, there has been no whiff of public criticism from the party's national leadership or allies in the conservative media.
|
|
The crash was a tragic accident, but there is an inevitable whiff of Communist Party cover-up about the events that day.
|
|
A peek of lingerie or a whiff of perfume would be the sensual, earthy touch that appeals to this Venus-ruled sign.
|
|
At the same time, teams whiff on the opportunity when it presents itself—for example, Hasheem Thabeet was selected ahead of Harden.
|
|
If there's an occasional whiff of proselytizing here, that's because Mr. Meyer is selling not just food, but a state of mind.
|
|
It's a slight whiff of euphoria around the stock market rally, the first time I have smelled it in a long time.
|
|
Over the next couple of days, I occasionally checked news stories online but didn't find even the whiff of a Yukon trip.
|
|
After I have been in the public arena for 26 years without even a hint, a whiff of an allegation like this.
|
|
He has claimed, without a whiff of evidence, that millions of illegal ballots cast by undocumented aliens cost him the popular vote.
|
|
For all of its failings, the movie sometimes manages to bring a scary whiff of the street into its sounds and images.
|
|
They give you the title of the show (if there is one), some whiff of the artist's intention and a short biography.
|
|
When I pressed my face into the jacket, the well-worn fabric felt slightly scratchy and I got a whiff of cigarettes.
|
|
Others take on coats: a haphazard quilting of rice, dried celery with its whiff of hay, and scrambled egg, a golden mantle.
|
|
Though a football field of marine life was laid out before us, there was only a whiff of fish in the air.
|
|
Some of my colleagues in the news media seem at pains to avoid detecting a whiff of race-baiting in Trump's attacks.
|
|
The last act, though, is a total whiff — too rushed, too riddled with plot holes and too incongruously hopeful to take seriously.
|
|
Instead, some liberals want national security practitioners to stay as far away as possible, lest a whiff of eugenics scent the air.
|
|
So instead of feeling specific and tender and lived-in, John Ambrose's scenes have a faint whiff of the generic to them.
|
|
Former appreciators, including Camille Pissarro, were shocked—catching an introductory whiff of the artist's rapturously cynical, gravely trivial, authentically ersatz sincere insincerity.
|
|
The Joker's seeming randomness, his refusal to be limited by any moral code or any whiff of history, is scary as hell.
|
|
But even a whiff of coziness between Biden and someone with ties to a fossil fuel company won't make climate activists happy.
|
|
Anyone who had even the slightest whiff of that meeting and failed to report it to the FBI should not be president.
|
|
Sometimes, though, you get a whiff of the bad old days, like a sudden glimpse of the seedy, pre-Disney Times Square.
|
|
Next, Razer added IP67 water-resistance to make sure the phone wouldn't conk out any time it got a slight whiff of moisture.
|
|
Though Apple no longer breaks out unit sales, any whiff of lagging demand will hit its suppliers hard, including Analog Devices and Broadcom.
|
|
I never noticed it, but the second I got home that day, I pumped some on my hand and gave it a whiff.
|
|
Among players with as many trips to the dish, his 41.5 percent whiff rate in 2014 was the worst in big-league history.
|
|
Moreover, as Britain grapples with what sort of place it should be after Brexit, the whiff of oligopoly risks turning people against capitalism.
|
|
And immediately, within that bumptious exclamation mark, an internal voice notes the telltale whiff of baby boomer triumphalism, of Generation X moral irresponsibility….
|
|
Chipotle mezcal mussels, though undermined by shockingly small mussels, had a delectable broth of garlic, butter, pepper and just a whiff of mezcal.
|
|
His displays of dominance, his need to be the centre of attention and his impetuousness have a whiff of Henry VIII about them.
|
|
His wardrobe both telegraphs the preternatural calm of a seeker and throws off the distinct whiff of joy he leaves in his wake.
|
|
Though show caves are not a specifically American phenomenon, their American iteration comes with a unique whiff of desperation and alluring entrepreneurial grift.
|
|
This year, the breezes off the lake carried something not scented in almost a decade: a whiff of optimism about the Italian economy.
|
|
Each page of this vividly rendered book carries with it a whiff of bygone, '50s-era Tangier, Morocco — and a bite of suspense.
|
|
I get concerned when regulators and legislators get a whiff of any kind of technological development because they are tempted to regulate it.
|
|
And then there is the local feature that your camera cannot capture: the peculiar whiff wafting up from the water at your feet.
|
|
Granted, this is not a very complex UI system, so it would be a pretty gigantic whiff if Google couldn't make this work.
|
|
In person, there's not even a whiff of Karen in evidence — her voice, her mannerisms and virtually everything about her is entirely different.
|
|
The impeachment scandal proved that many voters are either turned off by over-the-top attacks or catch a big whiff of bullshit.
|
|
Continued electrical outages and the whiff of something fishy about the PREPA-Whitefish contract are far from the only questions about Maria's fallout.
|
|
When Kennecia Posey, 26, rolled down her window to talk to the cop, the officer said he caught a big whiff of weed.
|
|
Over the years our rovers there have detected small bursts of methane, and two weeks ago, NASA's Curiosity rover detected yet another whiff.
|
|
There's a whiff of the epic in the sweeping, whooshing chorus; a widescreen grandeur to the echo and flangers on Skip Marley's voice.
|
|
What to Tell Your FriendIf the OJ is store-bought, take a whiff or sip to see how much spoilage has set in.
|
|
Many banks have stopped working with investors in order to focus solely on companies and avoid the whiff of conflict, the sources added.
|
|
All he did was whiff 219 Tigers in his last start, tying a major league record for strikeouts in a nine-inning game.
|
|
If a candidate antibiotic is some motley herbal treatment — if it has the whiff of mumbo-jumbo folklore — the opposition is stronger still.
|
|
Indeed, Shchukin's first purchases were creditable but benign, including a whiff of Romanticism: a lakeside enchanted castle by the Scottish painter James Paterson.
|
|
Still, it raises an unsettling possibility: if college sports carries Branch's "whiff of the plantation," then perhaps the rest of us do, too.
|
|
Ever since, drug rugs, for me, have conjured a bittersweet whiff of both maverick profundity and the sour disappointment of the mid 70s.
|
|
Just one whiff of it, they thought, might make people less anxious about a stranger — in this case, the researcher running the experiment.
|
|
Two weeks after the presidential election, a whiff of scandal is all it takes to rattle voters, even if just for a moment.
|
|
Last Friday, Alec Steinfeld was driving to work from Brooklyn to Manhattan when he caught a whiff of roadkill, local station WGN reports.
|
|
If they keep this year's first-rounder, the Wizards really can't afford to whiff—a problematic situation, considering this front office's draft history.
|
|
Experiments that followed showed that a whiff of oxytocin could make people more willing to open up and share painful stories with strangers.
|
|
In fact, several have been reappointed to other, often higher, positions, despite Mr. Duterte's vow to never tolerate even a "whiff" of corruption.
|
|
Included in the price: a whiff of association with its previous owners, a couple whose names were synonymous with wealth, taste and privilege.
|
|
Chappell, a 10th-year pro, described the whiff as "a little piece of humble pie" that might have helped him hone his focus.
|
|
With one whiff I can tell why the place is called "Cigar City," as people all around me are smoking hand-rolled stogies.
|
|
If I smell a whiff of everything that I used to be coming back, I'm going to trash this and do something else.
|
|
And if a whiff of ginger happens to hang in the air, we'll now recognize it as the sweet smell of collaborative innovation.
|
|
The sleeping bag symbolized Ms. Meriwether's deep commitment to her work, but it also gave off a whiff of the disheveled post-collegiate.
|
|
I can hear my friends in the apple orchards of Eastern Washington saying a little whiff of chlorpyrifos isn't going to hurt anybody.
|
|
As damning as it sounds, "Distances" has a whiff of earnestness, but it is the earnestness of artists in pursuit of human understanding.
|
|
It was a high-profile whiff and an early sign that Big Tech wasn't just ambitious; it was also sometimes full of hubris.
|
|
Like the "center," it carries a whiff of closed-circle elitism, one that produced bipartisan dinner parties more readily than civil rights legislation.
|
|
That one tiny whiff of vulnerability meant that I wasn't aloof Professor Brooks, I was just another schmo trying to get through life.
|
|
But there are some who gag at the mere mention of "goat cheese" or go into convulsions over the faintest whiff of Brie.
|
|
Once again, Antoni gets up close and personal with the offending odor, sticking his whole (gorgeous) face into the container and takes a whiff.
|
|
But it does have that whiff of saccharine cheesiness that we love so much, even as it tugs ever-so-unsubtly at the heartstrings.
|
|
Even so, Al Jazeera America's arrival brought a whiff of excitement and optimism into an American journalistic market starved for reasons to be upbeat.
|
|
Just last week, Kevin and his ex-wife Torrei threw their 11-year-old son Hendrix a Fortnite party ... without a whiff of controversy.
|
|
Given just a tiny whiff of the plant, most cats will temporarily turn into an approximation of a fully loaded, 1970s era Dennis Hopper.
|
|
Ukraine match earlier this week ... when Joachim Löw was caught on camera digging down below and then taking a big whiff of the scent.
|
|
Eschewing even the merest whiff of mahogany veneer or slightest hint of shag pile carpeting, the result is remarkably understated and very "new" England.
|
|
The character has struggled in recent years to resuscitate his cool image, while the long-running game franchise continues to whiff on successful releases.
|
|
So what's a better way to ensure a healthy exchange of information and avoid even the whiff of stonewalling by this or future administrations?
|
|
Barely a whiff of Emotional Sincerity, that deceptive fragrance sprayed by pop stars (and publicists) to dial online cacophony down to a mere murmur.
|
|
Today, garden guests may be able to catch a whiff of that rare stench, as the flower is expected to bloom at any moment.
|
|
The rest of the men at the cocktail party cock their noses and take a whiff of steaming testosterone wafting in from the porch.
|
|
" The Washington Post's Aaron Blake wrote that the situation "looks really bad" for Pruitt and "carries more than a whiff of a sweetheart deal.
|
|
It was hard not to detect a strong whiff of irony emanating from the proceedings: This is what the kids want, not Stephen Malkmus.
|
|
Though he calls Jesuits his moral heroes, his is a rather Latin American social justice Catholicism, with a whiff of Pope Francis to it.
|
|
And with a highly anti-reproductive rights healthcare bill currently making its slimy, fairly contested way through Congress, any whiff of reason is welcome.
|
|
It is based largely on news accounts, academic journals and the official reports of the Games, all presented with the appropriate whiff of skepticism.
|
|
But there's also an inescapable whiff of sexism, which is odd for a show that takes a firmly compassionate stand against homophobia and transphobia.
|
|
With equity markets having taken a knock on the trade tensions last year, even the whiff of progress in the months-long Sino-U.
|
|
The figure skater, 28, attended the TIME 100 gala in New York City on Tuesday night, and got a whiff of Urban's legendary aroma.
|
|
But while Obama worked to protect liberalism from any whiff of socialism, extremists on the right were forging a powerful alliance of their own.
|
|
Think about Kershaw burying a curve out of the zone in hope of a whiff from an eager batter, even behind in the count.
|
|
Kim Kardashian made $10 million in just ONE DAY of selling perfume worldwide ... and incredibly not even a single customer got a whiff yet.
|
|
The building has rounded, or squircle, corners for a softer effect and, perhaps, a whiff of Art Deco — which, after all, originated in France.
|
|
The meat bears a whiff of cumin, under crisp radish, cotija cheese and a slug of jalapeño sauce, the flavors loud and in unison.
|
|
The British native, who moved to the city in 2009, loved the store as soon as she caught an intoxicating whiff of its offerings.
|
|
Fair or not, the judge presiding over her case was careful not to let even a whiff of scapegoating enter into the sentencing remarks.
|
|
Go: Julia Jarcho's new play, "Pathetic," is a squirmy, sinister meditation on female desire, with a whiff of ancient Greece, our theater critic writes.
|
|
First Words The two most jarring events in the past decade of American life both had the whiff of a grand con about them.
|
|
" The refrain on that one: "I take a whiff, I feel like a pimp / but I wish it didn't make my dick go limp.
|
|
In Chile, Santiago's rakish sailor brother is the port city of Valparaíso, with its handsome looks, edgy creativity and whiff of salt-air decay.
|
|
The possibility that America might return to those repressive days has been rising like a whiff of nightmare, the stench growing stronger and stronger.
|
|
It would be impolite to reveal all, but note a distant, leavening bitterness — fenugreek — balanced by nutmeg and mace with their whiff of Christmas.
|
|
Unlike the acts of Joan Rivers and Phyllis Diller, there was not a whiff of the borscht belt or the coffeehouse about her material.
|
|
But center fielder Guillermo Heredia was playing too deep and Gamel charged late, forcing shortstop Jean Segura to backpedal and whiff on the catch.
|
|
"This one here smells like cherries," Stevens says, and sure enough, if you lean in close, you get a whiff of fresh stone fruit.
|
|
A whiff of tear gas floated over a wall at the Rufaro soccer stadium in Harare, the capital of the nascent state of Zimbabwe.
|
|
"I'm just happy getting you stuck in between my teeth," he sings on "Only Angel," which has the faintest whiff of the Sunset Strip.
|
|
Yet there's no glue — not a whiff of life or a single substantial, grounding directorial idea — that makes this pottage work scene to scene.
|
|
In the museum's case, Riley will be trained to learn specific bugs' scents, then sit in front of artwork when he catches a whiff.
|
|
Still, praise for oats has tended to have a whiff of sanctimony: Eating them is, as Quaker Oats taught us, the right thing to do.
|
|
A.A.d city at the Grammys that people would knee jerk reject "White Privilege II," or at least smell a whiff of disingenuous grandstanding in it.
|
|
The hope seems to be that by removing the whiff of baby boomer seediness from its pages, young people will read and subscribe to it.
|
|
She chafes when she has to pursue puff interviews instead of harder-hitting stories, and there's more than a whiff of white feminism about her.
|
|
Since there were two outs, Piscotty was running on contact and made a beeline for home plate when he saw Baez whiff on the play.
|
|
Yet whereas Ben writes Bev an admirably literary poem about her hair, her father burrows his face in her hair and takes a deep whiff.
|
|
There was just one whiff of scandal in 24 years, when he unwisely associated with Charles Keating, a fraudster in search of a bail-out.
|
|
In sum, that led to a $5 billion difference in revenue, and the difference between a beat and a whiff when compared to analyst expectations.
|
|
However, Mr Kurniawan offsets the carnage and lightens the mood with skew-whiff logic and humour that ranges from slapstick to ribald to pitch-black.
|
|
You might think of Murray Mints and long car journeys, comfort blankets and road atlases, milky, sugary tea and the faint whiff of austerity nostalgia.
|
|
In addition to nibbling tours and aromatherapy Wellness Whiff Walks, guests can try to spot the fairies living in tiny houses made from repurposed gourds.
|
|
If this were any other couple than Brangelina, even a much fainter whiff of infidelity at the beginning of their relationship would have doomed them.
|
|
In the interview, Blandino was asked how he came up with the idea to make makeup that, with one whiff, can be mistaken for dessert.
|
|
But if Trump remains unpopular, the whiff of scandal—combined with other issues, like his company's history of shady business practices—could become a stench.
|
|
So take a whiff and enjoy the smell of your vagina, and appreciate the fact that your sexual partners are likely really into it, too.
|
|
A whiff of cedar wood — just enough to give it a slightly rugged and masculine character without overpowering the more perfumey attributes, rounds it out.
|
|
President Trump is poised to whiff on the Paris climate accord decision he will make this week, but he could hit a home run instead.
|
|
Anytime you dare do something that carries even the remote whiff of danger, like jumping across a narrow gap, Six will butt in to complain.
|
|
Monday's straightforward, no-premium deal is a contrast to other recent attempts at industry mash-ups, which gave off a whiff of exuberance before collapsing.
|
|
However graceless a character Giuliani has always been, and whatever the root of his current antics, his fall has a whiff of tragedy to it.
|
|
A close second was the soft intestines in a chili sauce that made my lips tingle, despite the inherent whiff of gaminess, which faded quickly.
|
|
In conversation, as in art, Toews is a schputter; she likes to puncture anything that has a whiff of pretension or self-importance about it.
|
|
The candles come in cute, colorful boxes, making them perfect gifts for anyone who wants a whiff of nostalgia in their home away from home.
|
|
There is a whiff of outsider art to the book — of not really caring, or perhaps not even knowing, what mainstream children's books look like.
|
|
There is a whiff of federalist revolution in states' pushback against federal control over local marijuana, but the legal foundations of that revolution are weak.
|
|
The White House will have little tolerance for even a whiff of further evidence that Shulkin has been improperly using taxpayer funds for personal activities.
|
|
Experiments that followed — including Lane's — showed that a whiff of oxytocin could make people more willing to open up and share painful stories with strangers.
|
|
Winding through the crowds of Coachella, Electric Daisy Carnival, or any other summer festival, you'll inevitably catch a whiff of weed smoke in the air.
|
|
But there's also a whiff of that judgmental attitude of the American middle-class liberal and more than a hint of the Democratic Party's defeatism.
|
|
You can often open a container and simply take a whiff to know whether or not leftovers have spoiled — but sometimes it isn't so clear.
|
|
He lifted a blue jacket with "sports" emblazoned on the back, and brought it to his face, taking in a whiff as he did so.
|
|
LONDON — When the world first learned of Michael Jackson's death, from an accidental overdose in 2009, the news had a whiff of unreality about it.
|
|
It was so "lawyer-y" and full of bravado that even in my youth I could detect a whiff of deep-seated insecurity in it.
|
|
It portrays the ancient court of Judea as a repressed Addams family, with goth touches, but avoids any conspicuous moralizing or whiff of Christian salvation.
|
|
It's just harder to enjoy it now when I can also catch the faint whiff of methane lingering 20 years into our increasingly uncertain future.
|
|
Moreover, where Quixotic (2006), Birdsong, and Story of My Death are puckish, The Death of Louis XIV is sober with just a whiff of irony.
|
|
With barely any cleanup and a deep whiff of nostalgia (remember your first Scout camping trip?), cooking dinner in foil packets is poised for popularity.
|
|
There is an inquisitorial whiff in the air, and my particular fear is that in true American fashion, all subtlety and reflection is being lost.
|
|
Sticking a kid in front of the morning cartoons may carry a whiff of stigma now, but it's just as easy as it ever was.
|
|
Someone walking down the street might catch a whiff of mango, cucumber or watermelon and not know they were inhaling e-cigarette aerosols, Tan said.
|
|
Since then any whiff of evidence for Martian life past or present has stirred the public and perhaps congressional enthusiasm for the space agency's budget.
|
|
She grins like a kid in a candy shop as she tries on his bomber jacket, sniffing it to get a whiff of his scent.
|
|
Following the "phase one" trade deal with the United States, the coronavirus hit also undermines the whiff of bilateral trade optimism that had buoyed markets.
|
|
Lately, every tilt of the ailerons, every whiff of fuel, will cause me to periscope in my seat, searching the flight attendants' eyes for concern.
|
|
Descendant of Thieves: Specializing in shirts and knit tops, the staples designed by Dres Ladro and Matteo Maniatty carry a whiff of their Mediterranean heritage.
|
|
It's hard to fathom the attraction, but apparently once you've had your first whiff of him, Mikhail is as addictive and dangerous as crack cocaine.
|
|
The whiff of charred materials still hung in the air, in what some scholars said was an eerie echo of previous religious bloodletting in India.
|
|
While this take lends a not inappropriate whiff of sexual ambiguity to Flan, it also fits into the broader comic dimensions of Mr. Cullman's framework.
|
|
If a laptop is a flashy new car, the operating system is the great steering wheel that doesn't whiff out the window while you're driving.
|
|
As he poured the wine into my glass, I heard the faint whistling of breath in his nostrils and caught a whiff of his aftershave.
|
|
Mr. Guzzetta takes aim at baseball phraseology and offers us three synonyms for swinging at and missing a ball in baseball: WHIFF, FAN and STRIKE.
|
|
As he set it on the ice, he tried to pass — but he missed, and the whiff helped him evade a check from Max Pacioretty.
|
|
A plaid shirt in linen is breezy enough for rising temperatures and still has that whiff of teenage moodiness so well played in the series.
|
|
It heaves its way into corners, bounces a bit on the highway, and refused to let even a whiff of road noise into the cabin.
|
|
If there is a "credible whiff that justice has been politicized," Mr. Bharara told The New York Times in 2014, "there's nothing worse than that."
|
|
Critics and journalists combed Clinton's emails as they were publicly released and routinely uncovered messages included at least a whiff of wrongdoing on her part.
|
|
The flavors, too, give and take, pulverized peanuts leavened by ginger, sunny lemon pulled down to earth by cumin with its whiff of broken husks.
|
|
Behind Beijing's apparent caution may also be a whiff of fear that the truce might not last, said Andrew Gilholm, of the consultancy Control Risks.
|
|
But its whiff of the gothic lures the viewer into the violent underbelly of the city and exposes the supernatural and animalistic violence of the Candyman.
|
|
It offered spectacle, showmanship, illusion, escape; it carried, like those Geritol commercials and the ever-smiling blondes who decorated the sets, a whiff of the fairground.
|
|
They didn't find a whiff [of malfeasance] but rather former employees who'd left because they weren't a fit, because of an ethics issue, or for cause.
|
|
Scent is more elusive, unstable, mysterious—when you're out, you can get a distinct whiff of something suddenly in passing and be like, What is that?
|
|
Decades ago, you may have caught a whiff of castoreum in fancy store-bought vanilla ice cream, or tarting up some raspberry-flavored chocolate bon-bons.
|
|
It was a classic Cruz moment in that it was sneaky and too clever by half, and the crowd caught whiff of it a mile away.
|
|
I didn&apost hear Wall Street, Goldman Sachs, Democrats, most Democrats, a few did, but not most Democrats, they didn&apost give a whiff about China.
|
|
LUKE CARRLondon Johnson, ruminating on the secret meaning of "feisty" (February 13th) would have done well to have provided a whiff, as it were, of etymology.
|
|
Even better, each one is named after a dessert — Angel Food, Cookie, Lolli, Shortcake, and Whoopie Pie — and is scented with a subtle whiff of vanilla.
|
|
Scarcely believing it myself, I decided to head down and take a whiff for the anniversary of what is known locally as the "Big Smog" approached.
|
|
It's true, but there's a whiff of desperation around the fanfare, revealing a deep need to be accepted by the meat-obsessed, macho culture at large.
|
|
Jacoby Ellsbury has shown signs of life after a lost year, but has had a whiff of sunk cost about him from the moment he signed.
|
|
What could be more in vogue, yet simultaneously so vile that I want to puke up my Christmas dinner before I've even caught whiff of it?
|
|
Futhermore, there's a sour whiff of retrograde gender politics about the whole thing; in 2017, is a man with female body parts really so inherently hilarious?
|
|
At secondary school, we sniffed Tippex from our sweater sleeves, smoked Embassy and Rothmans at lunch, and had the odd aerosol whiff at the local rec.
|
|
A moist sweetness, spiced with leather and Lysol, sweat and must, bleach and the occasional whiff of cologne mixing with the wet-penny odor of dumbbells.
|
|
There could be many more people out there who have the right combination of factors to produce the chronic whiff, even if they don't smoke weed.
|
|
Gangsters from across the former Soviet expanse bought apartments at the city's most central address, which, for many, still carried a whiff of privilege and power.
|
|
But along with all the pungent aromas, a whiff of panic is in the air here in Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan Province in southwest China.
|
|
Related: Korean Artist Sketches Awkward Daily Life in Illustrations Whimsically Chill Nudes Bring Back a Whiff of Summer These Colored Pencil Illustrations Feel Like Classic Storybooks
|
|
While on a hike—smoking a joint in the woods—with some friends one afternoon, we caught a whiff of the long-awaited Random Access Memories.
|
|
She'd be the only justice on the Supreme Court without the imprimatur of the Ivy League, and there's little whiff of the coastal elites about her.
|
|
Lamb cooked sous vide was light, not gamy, served with fried sweetbreads and grilled preserved eggplants that left a faint whiff of wildfire on the plate.
|
|
Other momos reveal chives stitched through the beef, a garlicky lace, or chives alone, brilliant green and hardly wilted, giving off a whiff of sesame oil.
|
|
In a universe where the best basketball prospects are minutely dissected from their freshman years of high school, the collective whiff among the cognoscenti is stunning.
|
|
And some investment advisers detect a whiff of desperation in the Fed's efforts to keep the economic recovery and bull market going into their second decade.
|
|
Some of it has the whiff of desperation, with companies drawing down some $190 billion from corporate credit lines in the past month, according to Bloomberg.
|
|
They dated every weekend leading up to her 21st birthday party in late September, which was when Ms. Leas's family got a whiff of their romance.
|
|
All power to Branagh and Elton, then, as they devise a peculiar plot about Judith and her lost brother, even supplying a whiff of spicy whodunnit.
|
|
The 29-year-old righty is a three-time MLB All-Star with a powerful four-seam fastball and a whiff-inducing slider in his arsenal.
|
|
Still, for all the rules (items like backpacks, flags and selfie sticks are banned), there is still a whiff of old-time freedoms in the air.
|
|
The butter is fundamental to the flavor, and so you must cook it until it is unequivocally brown and until you catch the whiff of hazelnuts.
|
|
But Murugan, who tended his family's goats until he was in his 20s, writes about animal life (and death, lust, resentment) without a whiff of sentimentality.
|
|
This one features a keyboard at the front of the chassis, which is an ergonomic whiff if you ever try to use it on your lap.
|
|
It also conjures the ambiguity of its central character, a self-mythologizing showman trailed by a whiff of corruption and not averse to shading the truth.
|
|
But there was also far too strong a whiff of the work of Demna Gvasalia, the designer of Vetements and Balenciaga, down to their shared stylist.
|
|
The mushroom crumbs bear a whiff of the forest floor and notes of coffee and bitter chocolate that deepen when mixed with the accompanying cultured butter.
|
|
The affair tainted the early weeks of Macron's presidency with a whiff of bigger scandals that hit some of his opponents during a bitter presidential campaign.
|
|
The path of least resistance in Congress these days is to avoid any sort of deal-making and anything that even bares the whiff of bipartisanship.
|
|
And so a whiff of too-obvious confrontation of ideas perceived as political by some segment of the audience seems like it could hurt ticket sales.
|
|
Hell, we haven't even touched on his Kyokushin-influenced kicking game and those hold-the-hip-back low kicks that carry a whiff of Masato's influence.
|
|
So it is worth it to put to the side that these non-artists' 'naïve' psychic complexities carry with them a whiff of élite mystical fabulism.
|
|
The teacher of the class, a control freak and part-time life coach, caught a whiff of yours truly at 50 paces and reeled in metrosexual shock.
|
|
Gibson struck out Yoan Moncada and Yolmer Sanchez to start the game, bringing the White Sox's single-season whiff total as a team to a record 1,572.
|
|
On the back wall of the club, a screen runs video clips, Miley Cyrus's mostly, awkwardly adding a whiff of current pop culture to the stage design.
|
|
" Schwartz writes, "In conversation, as in art, Toews is a schputter; she likes to puncture anything that has a whiff of pretension or self-importance about it.
|
|
There has been a lot of talk about weakness in Alphabet's "other bets," like Nest, which, according to many reports has been a whiff by Alphabet's standards.
|
|
They'll be brining their account aggregation expertise to the Tandem app team, so in that sense there's more than a whiff of acqui-hire to this acquisition.
|
|
She gets one whiff of criticism and she's coming at you like that bear in "The Revenant," ready to claw every bit of flesh off your body.
|
|
On August 23rd, the lower court rejected the legislature's attempt to correct the original bill's defects, finding more than a whiff of bias lingering over the replacement.
|
|
Then they brought in a team of 200 "sniffers" to take a whiff of each shirt and guess how anxious, dominant, or extroverted the wearer might be.
|
|
Just the whiff of an OPEC meeting has driven oil prices higher, squeezed shorts in the futures market — and made further inaction by the cartel more likely.
|
|
The whole thing has a whiff of a bohemian Real World, with a cast entirely made up of mid-century Californian archetypes, but it's really about Dorothea.
|
|
They were flavoured not merely with the garlic that Escoffier championed (popular opinion considered it "unrefined and repulsive") but with a whiff of fin de siècle extravagance.
|
|
The D'arce is Ferguson's money technique and if he gets a whiff of it there's a good chance he'll finish it before his man can defend themselves.
|
|
The youngest of the most famous siblings in the world, Jenner consistently provides great beauty products, charity, and content, all without even the whiff of a scandal.
|
|
Ultimately, it didn't bring real, long-term success to the brand, but at first whiff the HTC 10 is strong enough to change some of that sentiment.
|
|
Jones conveys smarts and a whiff of seduction as this bright, capable doctor, while Omar Sy and Irrfan Khan are fun as very different men pursuing Langdon.
|
|
Sekou is an example of how young, black, Muslim men—marginalized in their communities, disillusioned by American imperialism—can be crushed for even a whiff of dissent.
|
|
I'm all for fun scents, but the cupcake-like whiff that the lip kits deliver are a bit too strong, and the formula is flat-out drying.
|
|
After getting a whiff of global fame in the Michael Bay monstrosity Age of Extinction, Reynor is returning to character roles, and audiences are better for it.
|
|
There remains a whiff of mystical faith in DC around Trump having the power to magically win after he proved the "experts," including me, wrong in 2016.
|
|
I approach the shipping containers, switch the amp on and, hearing those first few piano chords, I take a deep whiff of the freshly cut plastic lawn.
|
|
It can also carry the whiff of reporter-source coziness, pack journalism and clubbiness that pervades our capital city, contributing to Washington's case of acute bubble-itis.
|
|
The fans then followed Centineo's car from John F. Kennedy airport into Manhattan until the actor caught whiff of it and instructed the driver to lose them.
|
|
As Yochi Dreazen noted in a post for Vox, it cast men in the role of protectors and carried a stronger whiff of chivalry than of equality.
|
|
On the other side of the border, Canadians reacted to Mr. Trump's election win with concerns of their own, even anxiety, but also a whiff of pride.
|
|
That whiff of injustice, the inevitability of it, is woven into her world, as are the spirits of the ancestors with whom Josephine has a special connection.
|
|
There's nothing quite like catching a whiff of your homemade kimchi fermenting away in the back corner of your fridge every time you reach in for something.
|
|
I'd take a gleeful whiff of that unmistakable Abercrombie signature cologne, then rummage through the store to find that perfect linen shirt with the iconic moose logo.
|
|
But his most recent comments about the legitimacy of the election, with their whiff of third-world tumult, have perversely made some immigrants feel right at home.
|
|
In the dim light, there was a strong whiff of SoHo when it was young, when artists squatted in abandoned industrial buildings and punk was the soundtrack.
|
|
Occasionally I could find a faint whiff of sweat or skin immediately after pulling them off, but invariably, it would dissipate after a few hours of nonuse.
|
|
So the book is just the latest fruit of a dubious partnership — one that has the whiff of science without actually having anything to do with it.
|
|
There's a whiff of ancient Greece, a callback to a time when gods seemed nearer and one might take hold of a human, just for the lulz.
|
|
And a fairly big one at that: the whole of the back seat was slightly damp and the car had a distinct whiff of sick to it.
|
|
But Out of the Shadows doesn't contain a single whiff of what originally made Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael, and Michelangelo — or their chemistry as a team — so appealing.
|
|
At even a whiff of drama on the playground of my Missouri public school, the monitor would race over with her whistle hanging commandingly around her neck.
|
|
If Ms. Jelinek's acerbic play has a whiff of Vienna's storied bitterness and cynicism, Mr. Amir shows us the opposite side of the coin: sentimentality and schlock.
|
|
This procedure costs thousands of dollars, and I get no whiff that you think your stepdaughter is wasting her time on art, instead of pursuing an MRS.
|
|
It's come to you in a flash, and you need to jot it down now before this ephemeral whiff of remembrance floats out of your brain forever.
|
|
Google whiffed when it communicated changes in the Works with Nest program — it absolutely can't afford to whiff when it talks to people about their health data.
|
|
Chiang has lamented that he writes slowly, but there aren't many B-sides in his inventive books, and his writing is spare with a whiff of otherworldliness.
|
|
Raanta smothered an Ovechkin shot at 9:45 of the third period, and the final shot of the game for Ovechkin saw him whiff on the attempt.
|
|
Rachel Harrison's effervescent exhibition "Prasine," filled with skew-whiff sculptures in painted polystyrene, is a paradoxical achievement: It appears totally new by treating originality as a nonstarter.
|
|
Not voting -- particularly after he's already gone public with your own presidential ambitions -- gives off a strong whiff that this is simply a vanity campaign for Schultz.
|
|
Unto the breach steps Edward McClelland's "How to Speak Midwestern," a dictionary wrapped in some serious dialectology inside a gift book trailing a serious whiff of Relevance.
|
|
Even with Trump's own vulnerability on cronyism and a slew of ethics issues, some Democrats may be looking for a candidate without even the whiff of scandal.
|
|
In fact, the smell didn't hit me until I turned the corner into the parking lot, which is when I got an immediate whiff of the smoke.
|
|
Parker, who said he would be surprised if Joshua could catch him, detected a whiff of arrogance and said he was no stepping stone for someone else.
|
|
For $110 billion in weapons, or far less, you can allegedly kill a dissident journalist without so much as a whiff of indignation from the US President.
|
|
It is hard not to detect a whiff of excitement about all of this in the reactions of hard-core Brexiteers and their supporters in the media.
|
|
Fundamentally, the banna shrimp mixian is a tomato soup, removed from Campbell's reach by a whiff of smoke and a slight taste of shrimp and crab shells.
|
|
But this resourceful artist is in a zone of her own, tapping into the jangly hedonism of fashion without a whiff of its self-importance and insularity.
|
|
Allegedly there are no plans for how this change will directly generate profit—only the whiff of solidifying market share among messaging products like Apple messenger and SMS.
|
|
One whiff of this puts me in a good mood and when surrounded by a lot of boys on tour, you wanna be as fresh as a daisy.
|
|
I still feel the nostalgic pull of the brand: the extremely basic décor, the not-bad coffee, the faintest whiff (illusory, mass-produced) of taste, culture, exclusivity, class.
|
|
After reading reams of letters about bad loans to blood relations, yours was one of the few that had even a whiff of repayment about it (albeit partial).
|
|
There's something about the whiff of gender-neutral maximalism now sweeping fashion, from bigwigs like Gucci to upstarts like Area, that makes Bowie's pioneering style feel newly relevant.
|
|
Along the way, you may want to hop out of the car, take a deep breath and hope you catch a whiff of the katsura tree's sweet scent.
|
|
Instead of being greeted by grey concrete and the whiff of urine, as at many Amtrak stations, Brightline's Miami terminus looks like the lobby of a posh hotel.
|
|
Cocomero's label has little pink watermelons all over it, and when you scratch it, you'll get a whiff of the same burst of watermelon that's in the rosé.
|
|
The SMH, which tracks some of the biggest names in the space, has whipsawed back and forth based on any whiff of progress in negotiations — or lack thereof.
|
|
It started in the most earthy way possible — underscoring turn of the century parades, brothels and barrooms (even its original spelling, "jass," has a whiff of the unsavory).
|
|
After coastal carpet pythons catch a whiff of a nearby female, they will duke it out with any other male also trying to track down the same girl.
|
|
What is more, given the president's continuing business interests and the behaviour of some of those around him, seeking his approval can lead to the whiff of corruption.
|
|
Mr Macron issued his customary battle-cry against illiberal populists and European naysayers—but also tried to dispel what seems to him to be a whiff of complacency.
|
|
He enjoys the support of over two-thirds of Koreans and is famously "clean"; he even forgoes professional meetings with friends to avoid the slightest whiff of suspicion.
|
|
One likens his role to that of an Elizabethan spy, picking up any whiff of plot or sedition—or salacious gossip—and feeding it back to the "chief".
|
|
An alcohol detection system that could be available as early as next year would know whether a motorist is drunk by gathering a whiff of their ambient breath.
|
|
One whiff of that cool sea air, a modestly sized train station, the orange glow a taxi light beckoning; we were ready for Butlins, ready for Bugged Out.
|
|
This spread tightening comes before an ECB meeting, as weakness in the economy and a whiff of panic among investors put the central bank back in the spotlight.
|
|
But once the ICA management gets a whiff of the food there, it's likely to make the top of their outreach list (and perhaps their preferred caterer list).
|
|
You could be at the other end of the building and still get a whiff of the distinct aroma the shop has always boasted — and it's pure bliss.
|
|
The story goes that Hansen had to work stiff because if he didn't, he'd whiff on a punch or slam and everyone would catch on to the act.
|
|
And what we've learned, even at this early stage, is that you don't have to be in prison to find your life transformed by a whiff of scandal.
|
|
"I can say very confidently that I have not detected any whiff of interference with that investigation," Wray said at the Intelligence and National Security Summit in Washington.
|
|
Daniel unscrews the cap of that last container and slides it across the table for me to take a whiff: I detect molasses, vanilla, and moist brown sugar.
|
|
This affinity has more than a whiff of historical hypocrisy; the British empire, a distinctly top-doggy affair, was hardly noted for its enthusiastic encouragement of the downtrodden.
|
|
It all gives the IPO a whiff of desperation: Bitmain is in a similar position and has also now filed for a U.S. IPO, according to Refinitiv's IFR.
|
|
And, at the very end there, a whiff of wood smoke — which is apropos for Harington, who tells me that wood smoke is his favorite scent of all.
|
|
People for whom anything that has even a whiff of "urban" (read: people of color) influence is responsible for the complete unraveling of good olde, genuine American Values.
|
|
But this year, something is different — the spring air brings a faint whiff of the possibility of peace and a hoped-for end to our nation's longest war.
|
|
Imagine innocently lifting a Negroni to your lips and detecting a whiff of Hebrew National but thinking nothing of it because you assume the best of your host.
|
|
Related: Whimsically Chill Nudes Bring Back a Whiff of Summer New 8-Bit Watercolors Reimagine Famous Nudes and Starry Night These Colored Pencils Illustrations Feel Like Classic Storybooks
|
|
Their SUVs never got a whiff of trail; the closest they came to off-roading was when the parking lot of the Short Hills Mall needed a repaving.
|
|
They are often the first to detect a whiff of discontent from a V.I.P., like cast members of the network television shows who bed down there during filming.
|
|
When used domestically, it is a word often tainted with the whiff of extremism, not least because a variant of it, white nationalist, describes racist leaders and groups.
|
|
There are always moments when I'm working when I step back and point out moments in my paintings that carry the whiff of some artist I have admired.
|
|
The curry started with fresh ginger and garlic, of course, along with a truly minimal number of spices: coriander, cumin, Aleppo pepper and a whiff of dried turmeric.
|
|
Joseph W. Hagin, who worked for both Bush presidencies as well as Mr. Trump's White House, looked around the room with a smile and a whiff of nostalgia.
|
|
While the "getting in touch with your exes" conceit has a whiff of High Fidelity about it, Scrotal Recall is more reminiscent of How I Met Your Mother.
|
|
In fact, only now, three years after the music industry caught a whiff of Eilish's extremely fresh blood, was she even getting around to releasing her debut album.
|
|
Another new smoked salmon on the roster is cured with ras-el-hanout, the Moroccan spice blend, for a stronger flavor, with a whiff of cumin and pepper.
|
|
Gaudêncio Fidélis, the curator who assembled the 0003 pieces that made up the "Queer Museum" exhibition, had expected at least a whiff of criticism for the art show.
|
|
This puts news organizations into a terrible bind, especially when many conservatives—and the president himself—are ready to pounce at even the slightest whiff of liberal bias.
|
|
Unlike so many recordings of English works from earlier generations of conductor-knights, with their whiff of patrician amateurism, Mr. Elder's are distinguished by their preparation and refinement.
|
|
Remember, too, that nary a whiff of meaningful fraud occurred in the fiercely fought 2016 election, in which a record 33 million Americans voted with mailed-out ballots.
|
|
Of course, Vince has vowed to ban any player with a whiff of a criminal record -- but he didn't speak specifically to marijuana use ... at least not yet.
|
|
Yet the biggest awards bodies in film seem to be generally overlooking it, to the extent that its Best Picture nomination has the whiff of a consolation prize.
|
|
There is a whiff of Cain and Abel in their relationship, and more serious trouble from their father, Tom (Hugo Weaving), a bitter, alcoholic World War I veteran.
|
|
The crowd was almost entirely female, and about three-quarters of the TikTokers were male; occasionally, a sharp hormonal whiff of agony and longing would enter the air.
|
|
But durability has been a recent ally of Nadal's, and with his inexorable grip on the French Open, that doubt has been replaced by a whiff of inevitability.
|
|
Despite Sanders's assertion that he opposes authoritarian governments, Florida Democrats made clear they don't want to be associated with even a whiff of praise for the Castro regime.
|
|
Seriously: grab your dog's paws (with his/her consent, of course), take a huge whiff, and try and tell me that the odd musk doesn't warm your heart.
|
|
Stock prices have been buoyed by a mere whiff of optimism that the economy — despite occasional hiccups and dire prognostications by so-called experts — will keep chugging along.
|
|
While they can be profitable, they are clearly not public data and some investors — especially bigger ones — prefer to avoid them to avert even a whiff of controversy.
|
|
You often go to a museum expecting to catch a whiff of authenticity—the thrill of being proximate to something touched long ago by one of the greats.
|
|
"I can say very confidently that I haven't detected any whiff of interference with that investigation," said Wray, in his first public appearance since taking over the bureau.
|
|
BRASILIA (Reuters) - The nasty whiff of recession is hanging over Latin America and investors are taking cover as U.S. President Donald Trump ratchets up political and trade tensions.
|
|
BERLIN — In the final act of Janacek's "The Cunning Little Vixen," a litter of fox cubs comes upon a dead hare that carries a whiff of human scent.
|
|
The YouTube generation has learned to tune out ads — when they don't skip them altogether — so anything that carries the whiff of a traditional commercial often falls flat.
|
|
That horizontality was a result of the organizers themselves feeling left behind, and perhaps that's why any whiff of corporate money feels so out of place at BOS.
|
|
Some of this—the stern silliness of the complaint and the lingering whiff of insignificance—has to do with the fact that the tragicomic Knicks were the offended party.
|
|
" As to what the Post had found with regards to his interactions with Putin, Trump downplayed any whiff of wrongdoing, telling Pirro: "Anyone could have listened to that meeting.
|
|
"Superteam," new-number-as-new-identity, even the misspoken whiff of aiming for perfection—this is the franchise's ethos caught in a tape recorder and typed on a screen.
|
|
Mr Scheer's election pitch, which includes undoing gun controls brought in by the Liberals, cutting tax and ending national carbon pricing, may seem to have a whiff of Trumpism.
|
|
There's even a whiff of Walter Mitty in Andrea's fondness for mystery novels, allowing her to try applying what she's read to real-life situations, with predictably awkward results.
|
|
She first caught a whiff of something spectacular in the background when, in the 1980s, she found hints of a potential cluster of objects on old photographic survey plates.
|
|
I tear a wad of fungus from the ground and smell it, seeing if I can get a whiff of stink from the world before, the world of garbage.
|
|
Long-term effects are still unknown for most, though the FDA does a pretty good job about pulling anything off the shelf if there's even a whiff of danger.
|
|
Twitter blamed its third-quarter earnings whiff on the top and bottom lines Thursday in part on issues with technology that helps advertisers promote mobile apps on the platform.
|
|
You could stand outside, in my backyard, and you'd know Jose Fernandez was making batter after batter whiff, because, above that bilingual commotion, you'd hear abuelo cheer and laugh.
|
|
As sites like LiveJournal increased their user bases, the public became enthralled by the concept of blogging (though not without a whiff of judgement about the possibility of "oversharing").
|
|
And the whiff of malfeasance is all the justification that sites like 8chan and neo-Nazi outfit The Daily Stormer needed to start collecting personal information on CNN employees.
|
|
He has grabbed headlines thanks to the size of his make-up bill, the collapse of his popularity and the whiff of arrogance about his "Jupiterian" approach to power.
|
|
And focusing on older, less-spry founders might cause a venture capitalist to lose touch with today's consumers, customers and products, and totally whiff on a wave of innovation.
|
|
The show kicked off with a spoof of Black Panther, complete with the comedienne coming for the Wakandan crown — or just a whiff of T'Challa's (Chadwick Boseman) inner leg.
|
|
Oxytocin is released during lactation and orgasms, and one widely cited (though later challenged) study suggested that whiff of the chemical can increase trust in a money-sharing game.
|
|
McGann says there's evidence humans tend to take a whiff of their hands after shaking another's which suggests "an unexpected olfactory component to this common social interaction," McGann writes.
|
|
And even if the national media has become more interested in the opioid crisis in the wake of 2016, it still has a whiff of too little, too late.
|
|
Asking for 11th-hour emergency stays from a Supreme Court that is split down the middle on the legality and constitutionality of voting restrictions carries a whiff of desperation.
|
|
Asparagus, peas, onions, radishes, fiddleheads, ginger, lemons, herbs and flowers are some of the crops that will go into a seasonal American menu that conveys a whiff of France.
|
|
A 1960s track sung by Davy Jones, the Monkee who died in 2012, is resurrected with "Love to Love," a Neil Diamond song with a whiff of Zombies psychedelia.
|
|
All of these online avenues that help independent artists get their work out there have been great, and when somebody gets a whiff of something, they spread the word.
|
|
Shares of the Seamless parent cratered after a major third-quarter earnings whiff Tuesday, falling more than 43% in a single trading session to a new 52-week low.
|
|
SAM can lay 22016,000 bricks a day, and the company said it's about time this industry got a whiff of the change almost every other market has been seeing.
|
|
Nola's streak ended when he walked Michael Conforto with two outs in the seventh, but he ended his night by recording his 10th strikeout, a whiff of Dominic Smith.
|
|
But here's what President Donald Trump could say, roughly, before this week: There was never a whiff of collusion between the Russians and any serious person in my campaign.
|
|
To many readers — and I agree with them — this seems to be equating all three and has a whiff of blaming the victim for the actions of her husband.
|
|
It was his star attraction: Nigel Farage, the disgraced former head of U.K. Independence Party, the fringe British political party, hat has a faint whiff of racism about it.
|
|
Her ship is running smoothly, and yet as her reaction to the email scandal shows once again, there's often a whiff of inhumanity about her campaign that inspires distrust.
|
|
The vapor also doesn't have the nasty smell of cigarettes, and can emit a subtle whiff of fruit or other flavors when users vape — or no odor at all.
|
|
For two straight weeks, a whiff of controversy has surrounded the NBA, as top teams continue to rest star players for the league's showcase Saturday night game on ABC.
|
|
LeMond responded by paying an entire camera crew to follow Armstrong for the duration of his 2009 Tour de France comeback, on the hunt for any whiff of misbehavior.
|
|
If you think that's lordly of me, wait until you get a whiff of the play's ripe caricature of Mr. D'Agata, especially as inhabited by the swaggering Mr. Cannavale.
|
|
But the whiff of secrecy — and the umbrage Mr. Hannity has taken after the secret got out — speaks to the growing role of L.L.C.s in the nation's housing market.
|
|
Each restaurant will also have an entry area with a bar and lounge and be decorated with a whiff of the sea with elements like rusted beams and tiles.
|
|
Yet when I visited Reid in Nevada, I detected a whiff of, if not neediness per se, maybe a need to remind me that he has not been forgotten.
|
|
The Capitol News Service might have been just the thing to address this problem, despite the whiff of propaganda it emitted, but it never quite got off the ground.
|
|
But it also incorporates soul, funk, the blues and even a whiff of EDM — "a couple hundred years' of music that comes out of our country," Ms. Reagon said.
|
|
The yolk is the green-black of smoked glass, with a gray, nearly calcified halo, trapped in an oval of wobbling amber and emitting the faintest whiff of brimstone.
|
|
Despite her insistence to the contrary, there is a strong whiff of "just-get-on-with-it" matter-of-factness that may be a little beyond some of us.
|
|
Such floors do require more time and expertise to install, and have a whiff of the intricate parquet that designers sometimes specify for one-off interiors for individual clients.
|
|
Manfred and Selig waved off any whiff of criticism as the Wilpons cut costs and baseball budgets as if the Mets were a small market team by Flushing Bay.
|
|
Supporters of Mr. Soros, who is 86, a native of Hungary and a Holocaust survivor, have detected a whiff of anti-Semitism in the attacks in the United States.
|
|
On the domestic front, he has cracked down hard on the Brotherhood and built a hypermodern surveillance state where everyone is monitored for the slightest whiff of Islamist leanings.
|
|
Before he ever opened his mouth, before we ever learned anything about him, this was a fact that we understood immediately, like catching a sharp whiff of cheap cologne.
|
|
"Just take a gentle whiff," one Pint Shop flavor expert — dressed in a fluffy pink lab coat — asked a visitor as she held an oversized beaker of ice cream.
|
|
Almost every day brings a whiff of another scandal or controversy from the Trump White House -- meaning that any proof of wrongdoing found by Democrats could be especially powerful.
|
|
The second rocket blew up during fueling in September 13 — and this time, there was a whiff of scandal, as sabotage was considered among the reasons for the explosion.
|
|
And the fact that the new board's main targets would be companies from China, where business can have a whiff of the Wild West, compounds the risk to its reputation.
|
|
BRASILIA, May 250 (Reuters) - The nasty whiff of recession is hanging over Latin America and investors are taking cover as U.S. President Donald Trump ratchets up political and trade tensions.
|
|
There's a whiff of classism in these three films' portrayals of neo-Nazi leaders—as if they have to be older, more articulate, and wearing slacks to be taken seriously.
|
|
At the very least, the mode as planned represents a wedge that content purists (it has a whiff of derogation but they may embrace the term) can widen over time.
|
|
And so, on a rainy October morning, I walked through the hospital gates, pushed the heavy wooden door open, and got a first whiff of the sterile public healthcare system.
|
|
Perfume connoisseurs will argue the same for fragrances — all it takes is one whiff to be transported from your studio apartment to a Parisian garden or the beaches of Capri.
|
|
These interlopers, or "coycrocks" in the island's parlance, bring with them a strong whiff of the outside world as their unfamiliar ways shine a new light on Lark's questionable traditions.
|
|
The quarter was more or less a complete whiff, falling short of Wall Street estimates for earnings, revenue generated, and also the company's outlook for the first quarter next year.
|
|
And she could enter office distrusted and disliked by many if not most Americans, according to polls, and trailed by a whiff of scandal she has been unable to shake.
|
|
Pundits and political scientists have dubbed this polling whiff the "Bradley effect," surmising that some voters deceived pollsters about their intentions, and some have suggested racism was behind the defeat.
|
|
The only thing her superiors at the Winter Court were able to agree on was that the opportunity should be seized before the Summer Court got a whiff of it.
|
|
When I untwisted the jar, I was hit with a strong whiff of pumpkin pie… similar to the scent that wakes me up on Thanksgiving morning at my parents' house.
|
|
After the women of Negan's rape harem get a whiff of Eugene's skills as a chemist, they ask him to make a pill that will help them painlessly poison Amber.
|
|
And though the average amount of plastic we inhale from the air might be small in comparison, they added, people in certain areas could still be getting quite a whiff.
|
|
"Either this is just a continuation of the selling from yesterday or someone has again got a whiff of the labour numbers," said a dealer with one London-based broker.
|
|
Starting last year, shortly after the New Yorker article came out, IRCO case managers caught whiff of rumors about the earthquake—specifically, rumors that it would happen the next day.
|
|
In the wild, their aphrodisiac effects are freakishly powerful: Give a female pig a whiff of androstenone, a pheromone produced by boars, and she'll present her rear, ready for action.
|
|
If you take away the neon spandex and a pristine studio and replace it with black lingerie and a whiff of BDSM, shibari rope bondage looks a lot like yoga.
|
|
Apple: Down 11% after a complete whiff on earnings and posting its first sales decline in 13 years, along with its biggest activist investor dumping his stake in the company.
|
|
After years of relaxing federal gun laws and multiple failed attempts to pass something -- anything -- that has the lightest whiff of new restrictions, trust and patience are all but gone.
|
|
The shine level and hit of moisture is much the same, but these don't smell overwhelmingly of strawberry-infused plastic — rather, you get an unobtrusive whiff of warm, sugary vanilla.
|
|
That accessibility becomes a double-edged sword when they do not perform as well as they should, or if fans catch a whiff of jealousy, bad behavior or team infighting.
|
|
Instead, the president and his cabinet continue to steadily march our country backward, without a whiff of concern for the long-term impacts on our economy, environment, or our future.
|
|
"There is the whiff of risk-off sentiment in the market and that is definitely helping the yen," said Alvin Tan, a strategist with French bank Societe Generale in London.
|
|
The modern-day staging renders the Trojan siege as a familiar-looking quagmire, and gives the age-old battle between honor and cynicism a whiff of contemporary relevance (2:50).
|
|
It was the third double-digit strikeout game in the majors for Rodriguez, who finished one whiff shy of his career high, set against the Tampa Bay Rays on Sept.
|
|
It is, the guide states, the park at "its most awkward," encouraging you to take a big whiff of air that combines the scents of sewage, industry, and floral plantings.
|
|
Not all that long ago, I publicly disavowed diets, and my doctor's eating plan for sentient beings is so low in carbohydrates that it carries a strong whiff of dieting.
|
|
As the camera focused on Brady, his face became stuck in a smile that could be characterized as something between goofy and satisfied (and with the whiff of a smirk).
|
|
You feel the whiff of a #MeToo dynamic to some of the exchanges, and there's no doubt that an initially subservient Ms. Blanchett can give as good as she gets.
|
|
Some are also riding on BMX bicycles, anachronisms that give the movie a whiff of contemporary desperation that signals an endeavor reaching for honest nostalgia and trapped by bloodless marketing.
|
|
In this image, recalling Monet with a whiff of Constable, Mr. Morell reverted to a technique he'd used to celebrate both artists on site (photographing at Giverny and Hampstead Heath).
|
|
Just a few whiff-crazy years since his retirement, it's striking to see a career like Lee's: in 14 seasons as a power hitter, he never struck out 19983 times.
|
|
Scamarcio gives off a whiff of Tony Curtis in "Sweet Smell of Success," and also of Marcello Mastroianni in "La Dolce Vita," though his milieu makes theirs look positively antiseptic.
|
|
From stars such as Khloe Kardashian and Nick Lachey to Jessica Burciaga and Anthony Anderson these celebs have helped some sweet snouts get a good whiff of their lavish life.
|
|
He lured them with the whiff of money and the proximity to other powerful, famous or wealthy people — so much so that many looked past his reputation for sexual misconduct.
|
|
"[Santa] packs it in perfect lines on his coffee table and then takes a big whiff to smell the high quality aroma of the snow," the item's description continued. Yall.
|
|
And — did my eyes deceive me — I thought I saw a hint of humanness, in the whiff of desire making its way toward the young, blunt and beautiful Israeli agent.
|
|
Nairobi's streets are also once again filling up with the choking whiff of teargas, as rights activists protest Kenyatta's overreaction to a ceremony that ought to have been simply ignored.
|
|
Broadie defined failure as an array of dastardly outcomes: a complete whiff at the ball, a shot that skirts past the green, a shot that barely advances toward the hole.
|
|
Frankel places Poppy in a thoroughly empathetic and loving family, the kind that picks up and moves to Seattle the minute they encounter a whiff of homophobia in their town.
|
|
Op-Ed Contributor LONDON — There were quiet rumblings in the press when they first started dating, a whiff of snobbery: Meghan Markle — half black, American, divorced, actress — was a curiosity.
|
|
It could open up questions specifically about his paid speechmaking; there is certainly a whiff of Hillary Clinton's paid speeches to Wall Street insiders, which haunted her early 2016 campaign.
|
|
It's a purposefully sexual move, one a woman only enacts if she hopes someone — like, say, her husband — will be close enough to her cleavage to take a deep, arousing whiff.
|
|
Marrin portrays this paradox perfectly in "The Sacrifice," a funny painting in which a woman contorts her face as she steps up to the flower's spathe to get a huge whiff.
|
|
"We are seeing a consolidation of the dollar's losses and there is a whiff of nervousness among dollar bears out there," said Viraj Patel, an FX strategist at ING in London.
|
|
So, to make sure we didn't whiff on a qualified candidate, we'd have very long discussions about contenders who had done a good amount of relevant work in their previous role.
|
|
In what seems to be the first whiff of nuance we've ever seen from Negan, however, he finds this idea unacceptable — and then slams an insanely large knife through David's throat.
|
|
Likewise in 2008 Boris Johnson, then mayor of London, was derided for saying that table tennis originated not in China but on Victorian dining tables and was known as whiff-whaff.
|
|
Medicaid, Obamacare, the ACA — any whiff of support, even if it's just voting for a bill that would do anything less than completely dismantle it, is toxic in the Idaho Legislature.
|
|
And while early print deadlines for the Sunday edition are a fact of life, it's regrettable that many print subscribers had no whiff of this huge news in their Sunday paper.
|
|
In the fall, with the whiff of the July 4 party barely faded, Swift's single life — and her "reinvention" – were the focus of feature stories in People, Esquire, and Rolling Stone.
|
|
But we haven't seen this process of Earth-Moon exchange for our favorite gas, oxygen, and it's pretty incredible that Kaguya was able to take a whiff from so far away.
|
|
Given the price and the stage Bloomsbury AI were at, the acquisition also has more than a whiff of acqui-hire to it, although there is some IP in the deal.
|
|
It was Mao in the 1950s who first promoted the mantle of Chinese leadership in Africa—under the guise of class solidarity, but in reality with a whiff of racial tutelage.
|
|
Justin Bieber is staying in a sick rental mansion before his Bay Area concert Friday night, and if he takes a deep breath ... he just might catch a whiff of Beyonce.
|
|
" When she later saw a picture of him, she was unmoved, describing her impression of him only as that of "a guy with a big smile and a whiff of geekiness.
|
|
An administration that has separated children from their parents, hardly permitting a whiff of farewell -- and then all too often loses track of the kids -- wants to bring migrants to sanctuaries?
|
|
Still, the whiff of scandal has clung to him for years, providing seemingly endless fodder for late-night comedians and arguably being the single biggest setback to his dashed presidential dreams.
|
|
Lawnmowers don't just hover over their kids to make sure that they are safe, they obliterate any whiff of a struggle for their kids by curating every aspect of their childhoods.
|
|
It would be a major concession to Russia, particularly if nothing is given in return, at a time when the very mention of Russia carries a whiff of scandal and intrigue.
|
|
His spree was uncovered during an autopsy on one of his Drake Hospital victims, after a doctor detected a whiff of cyanide and traced the death back to the hospital orderly.
|
|
Even John Cena has the whiff of a ghost about him, the way he crept up on us and we didn't really notice what we'd witnessed until he was almost gone.
|
|
In the context of the pansexual, gender-fluid, Molly-popping millennials who make conservatives shudder, he's a musky whiff of nostalgia, a stubborn ember of patriarchy, a vintage stripe of sybarite.
|
|
No. But it means there is an ethic and a standard when there is a whiff that there may have been wrongdoing, you do everything you can do to identify it.
|
|
Still, a lack of Trump love may not be the only reason that Strange took such a distinct second, since a whiff of scandal has also followed him into the election.
|
|
Mostly, though, the new Rays are content to wallop and whiff, and to tie their fortunes not to mix-and-match versatility but to the louder vagaries of the long ball.
|
|
The album has the customary Escovedo mixture of romping Stooges guitar and plaintive folk, but also, in places, a cinematic heft that suggests Ennio Morricone—a whiff of the spaghetti Southwestern.
|
|