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Opening the show, she lauded New York as "a city that represents everything I believe in: diversity, strength, courage and perseverance".
If he can succeed in a televised event that represents everything that's wrong with modern America, as The Bachelor has for the past 14 years, he should do really well in the election.
Perhaps not uniquely in new scientific fields, nanotechnology also suffers from a prevailing false dichotomy that represents everything "nano" either as a marvel that will revolutionise our existence and allow us to transcend our capabilities, or as a hazard of unprecedented proportions that will devour the environment, possibly in the form of grey goo, and eventually eliminate humanity.
What is missing are the continually flowing stream of events that represents everything happening in a company, and that can act as the lifeblood of its operation," he wrote.
In office, he failed to overhaul or shrink a financial system that represents everything wrong with the modern economy.
In short, it's a genre-mixing, community-driven, performance-oriented, collaborative project that represents everything that's right with American poetry and everything American poetry is fast becoming.
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Nagel's was the sort of argument that represented everything Pat couldn't stand about philosophy.
Growing Up to Join the Show A few years back, Growing Stage in Netcong put on a "Wizard of Oz" that represented everything the group stands for.
Kumamon is a yuru-kyara, or "loose character", one of the cuddly creatures in Japan that represent everything from towns and cities to airports and prisons.
The name now represents to her foreigners' attitude of "condescension filled with pity," and all the stereotypes outsiders have come to attach to Haitians — as "nice people, maybe," but "disorganized, uneducated, untrained, corrupt" and somehow under the thrall of voodoo, a religion that represented "everything the white Westerner was not: exotic, African, pagan, exciting, dangerous, deep".
In 1831 David Brewster published a short biography of Isaac Newton, portraying him as a hero that represented everything the author wanted to say about the moral status of science and its practitioners, and how they should be supported in late Georgian Britain.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com