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In the face of.
If people act in the face of something, they do it despite it or when threatened by it.
Exact(16)
Kristopher McDowell, singer, in "Faces of Love".
Kristopher McDowell, singer, in "Faces of Love: The Act".
So are many of the amazing sculptures in "Faces of Tibet: The Wesley and Carolyn Halpert Collection" at Carlton Rochell.
In "Faces of Made in China," a series of typological portraits looking at workers inside six Chinese factories, the photographer Lucas Schifres seeks to consider the otherwise anonymous people who produce our essential possessions by looking directly into their eyes.
In "Faces of Change," directed by Stanley Nelson and Michele Stephenson, five people from five continents take the camera into their own hands and tell how they face discrimination in their homelands.
In "Faces of an Epidemic," the photographer Philip Montgomery shows the day-to-day realities of the national opioid crisis as seen in Montgomery County, Ohio, where the situation is most urgent.
Similar(43)
Weakness of wages in face of strong employment "striking".
In the late 1990s ASEAN was powerless in face of a series of blows.
Oil has been discovered in the Sahara desert - good news in face of the Suez situation.
The weight of the noble was reduced by Henry IV in face of foreign competition.
"He is so arrogant and sits smug in face of single parents losing money.
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