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Was that supposed to SIGNIFY something?
And those Olympic roses seemed to signify something else.
To Tom and his creator, the waxwings presumably signify something.
Yet this elongated Greater Near East does not signify something new but something old.
Now, though, there is a chance for this story to signify something — something hopeful.
With its emphasis on destruction and fragmentation, this imagery could signify something broader than Ms. Swartele implies.
The writer in him, perhaps, sensed that the oil from a snapped-off pipe on the ocean floor might yet come to signify something deeper about his administration.
I think a "revolution" tends to signify something really large and societal, whereas this phenomenon really did affect just a small segment of the population.
Republicans liked this, but Nancy Pelosi, the Democrats' leader in the House of Representatives, called the idea "simply unacceptable".This sound and fury, however, may signify something important.
To be sure, creamy shopping bags have been around for a while — they are an extension of a branded world — but they clearly signify something to people.
Another Vancouver magazine, a new Asian-inspired publication called Banana, says it chose its name to signify something yellow on the outside and white inside.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com