Sentence examples for remain ubiquitous from inspiring English sources

Exact(19)

Casino-hotel buffets remain ubiquitous, and a great bargain, but the menu choices have moved well beyond all-you-can-eat prime rib.

And lavish perks — ranging from personal use of the corporate jet to having the company cover the C.E.O.'s income taxes — remain ubiquitous.

It has achieved reforms, but it was conceived not as a reformist movement but as a collective expression of grief and anger, a demand for restitution of wrongs that go back centuries and whose effects remain ubiquitous.

And how can Ms. Casta and Ms. Gordon, both nimble actresses (and quite beautiful), be expected to measure up against real-life goddesses whose images remain ubiquitous and irresistible?

Andrea Bak In the Romanian countryside the tradition is to slaughter a pig at Christmas, and while this practice is long gone in big cities such as Bucharest, pork dishes remain ubiquitous throughout the holiday period – along with copious amounts of țuică (fruit brandy).

Despite the well acknowledged role of portion control in weight management, large portion sizes remain ubiquitous in the marketplace.

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Similar(41)

Genes expressed ubiquitously in the ovary mostly remained ubiquitous in the embryo and were additionally enriched in meso- and endoderm; genes of the cellular gene set are enriched in ectoderm/epidermis cells of the late embryo; subcellular genes were highly expressed in the ectoderm and nervous system of the embryo.

In the decades since, copying has remained ubiquitous in the fashion industry.

As for David, not only has he remained ubiquitous in both fine art and popular culture, but also even a Talmudic injunction protects his reputation, despite adultery and murder.

After enthusiastically welcoming so many new tracks, the audience gets a little antsy when the band amble off without playing Sweet Disposition, their long-tail single from 2009 that remained ubiquitous via TV montages and ads for another couple of years.

For instance, William of Sherwood recognizes the distinction between natural and accidental consequences inherited from Boethius, as well as the distinction between absolute and as-of-now (ut nunc) consequences (Stump 1982, 291) — the latter remained ubiquitous in the 14th century (Dutilh Novaes 2008).

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