Sentences with phrase «fondness for american»

But the chef, who holds both a culinary degree and a baking and pastry degree from the Culinary Institute of America, has a deep fondness for American cookies.
China should be attractive to small U.S. companies, due to the market's size, rising consumption in the country and an increasing fondness for American products among China's young and growing middle class of over 300 million consumers.
This fondness for Americans and their nation continued until the end of his life.

Not exact matches

Yet from constitutional centennial to bicentennial, successive generations of American Jews had been taught to believe that the fondness for «Old Testament» metaphors in American public discourse displayed the fundamental continuity between ancient Jewish and modern American values — when, in fact, these metaphors expressed a flourishing Christian triumphalism.
«What they do really well is take things we, especially New Yorkers, have fondness for — Italian - American food from the»50s, for example — and blow it out of the water,» he says.
One's a Bulgarian winger that plays for Aston Villa and the other is an 80s American teen film star — but both share a fondness for big hair and highlights
AMERICAN fondness for guns never ceases to amaze.
And for an American educator with, say, a quaint fondness for evolution, the power of the Christian right in many parts of this country to dictate what facts and truths may be uttered in a classroom is appalling.
With their fondness for shellfish and fish broth, eaten on a daily basis, the Japanese probably consume more cholesterol than most Americans.
So far, so what but with Deans fondness for stock - car racing taking him to the track and Henrys dealings putting him under investigation, this poke around the American Dream boasts intelligence and integrity.
Over on the TV side, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association once again proved its fondness for new series, recognizing virtually every major new 2016 premiere: Atlanta, American Crime Story, This Is Us, Westworld, Insecure, The Night Of, The Night Manager, Stranger Things, The Crown, Divorce, Goliath, and even Epix's political comedy Graves.
While the casting of Crispin Glover as a disassociated loner who discovers he has the power to talk to rats is sort of inspired, «X Files» expat writer Glen Morgan's Willard suffers (and yes, I feel silly for saying this) from a lack of character development, a forced psychoanalytic structure, and a sort of inbred Comic Book Guy fondness for self - reference (i.e., the majority of the bit characters have animal names — a sort of thing used best in Landis's An American Werewolf in London and Dante's The Howling: Mrs. Leach, Mr. Garter, Janice Mantis, George Boxer, and so on) that grates.
Wyeth had a particular fondness however for American artists, in particular the American landscape / seascape painter and printmaker Winslow Homer.
Adam Liptak's NY Times piece on foreign countries» view of the American fondness for punitive damages — in a nutshell, it adds to the impression that we are a scary and unstable nation — drew links and comment from many blawgs, including Dan Hull at What About Clients?
Driving in the Future The fondness many Americans feel for the glory days of Detroit and long convertibles, with almost obscene fuel consumption figures, reflects the love affair all cultures share for the invention that first shrank distances and popularized personal travel at speeds faster than 5 miles per hour.
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