Exact(17)
Unlike Sinatra he doesn't impose his mood swings or dictate new rules to the standards he performs along with originals.
We are a nation of laws, where a deal is a deal, and no one side — even the federal government — can arbitrarily dictate new terms.
She believed that as a child she had received communications from Liszt, Rachmaninov and Beethoven, who informed her that when she grew up they would dictate new pieces.
Google's free Evernote competitor, Keep puts notes and lists on your wrist – great for shopping lists – and allows users to dictate new notes much like the Evernote app.
Moreover, current energy supply concerns make of efficiency another first priority issue to dictate new stringent design criteria for industrial and commercial equipment.
They make it simple to dictate new items and reminders; you just tap to record (instead of making a phone call).
Similar(43)
It vanquished cleanliness and stable footing, and it dictated new fashion guidelines.
"Society is dictating new goals like making a career, et cetera, but the core still remains," Ms. Vasilyeva said.
We ask whether design criteria of the past still hold for these projects, and suggest that accumulating experience dictates new engineering guidelines for these increasingly sophisticated missions.
With the collapse of the Ottoman Empire at the end of World War One, the Allies dictated new borders, denying the Iraqi nation its natural outlet to the sea.
Especially among Protestant leaders bent on dictating new, austere rules for everyday life, embroidery was celebrated as women's work and actually called "work," as if it were the only option.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com