Sentence examples for burgeoning organized from inspiring English sources

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The goal of these burgeoning organized leagues is to... I'm not sure what the goal is.

But despite an overall grim picture, stories of minority empowerment are slowly growing, from sparkling new houses of worship like St. Peter's to burgeoning, organized self-defense efforts among non-Muslims.

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Monday's action at the Nuevo Laredo crossing is the latest in a burgeoning protest movement organized by Dreamers – the largely Hispanic, undocumented immigrants who were brought to America when they were in their infancy.

Local officials and businesses are now voicing their opposition to BPM's return next year, bringing to light some of the complex tensions between a burgeoning musical tourism industry, organized crime, and public safety.

Using Geographic Information Systems (GIS), the densities and distributions of plant remains will be studied within a variety of architectural spaces to understand how cooking and preparation may have been organized within the burgeoning urban landscape of Huari.

"While the immigrant population burgeoned, there was very little organized anti-immigrant attitude," said Daniel B. Cornfield, a sociology professor at Vanderbilt University.

But Dayan says Reed hasn't done enough to organize in the burgeoning area of digital media or lobbied hard enough to boost California's film incentives. .

Examples include the Sierra Club's "Beyond Coal" campaign; the work of 350.org, which organizes activists online; the burgeoning fossil-fuel divestment campaign; and the efforts that prompted forty thousand people to turn out on a frigid February day in Washington this year to demand that the President deny permits for the tar-sands-carrying Keystone XL pipeline project.

Harman also notes that "London in 1840 was teeming with immigrants, the unemployed, and a burgeoning working class who were more literate and organized than ever before". Class boundaries were changing, and servant turnover rates were high, a constant vexation for the wealthy.

It's a little known story, not short on irony, about organized crime's contributions to the burgeoning Civil Rights movement of the 1950s by taking what was a segregated rhythm and blues musical style, then termed "race music," played only for the consumption of African American audiences, and making it palatable and popular with young white kids.

This last subgroup has tremendous potential to expand and organize the multifaceted nature of this burgeoning variety of interests, particularly among students with a strong emphasis on implementation science and all of the diverse interests of global health's constituents.

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