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to diversions
noun
A tactic used to draw attention away from the real threat or action.
Exact(10)
Inbound long-haul flights also faced delays owing to diversions but should return to normal tomorrow.
Some of the water is diverted west, to Los Angeles, and some is diverted east, to central Arizona, and some continues downstream, to diversions farther south.
At a campaign stop in Ohio on Tuesday, Romney said of Obama: And so his campaign has resorted to diversions and distractions, to demagoguing and defaming others.
Gov. Jay Inslee (D-Wash)., the chair of the Democratic Governors Association, said that Republicans were losing on the health-care issue and that attacks on single-payer amounted to diversions.
AT some point on the campaign route to Iowa and New Hampshire, the name Howard Dean yoked itself to a shoe -- specifically, to a unisex sandal already married in the public consciousness to diversions like mud baths.
Journeys could take up to 90 minutes longer due to diversions while a redevelopment project is taking place at Reading.
Similar(50)
The Shower Posse is said to be paying troublemakers over $1,000 a day to create diversions to distract the police.
She did not plead guilty to diversion of the grant.
Keeping Russian warheads intact leaves them needlessly vulnerable to diversion.
And finally, thanks to Diversion for this: "People accuse me of being a luggage denier.
Laura has almost a decade of experience working on waste – ranging from prevention to diversion.
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