Sentences with phrase «often insinuate»

Discussions surrounding the economic conditions of Aboriginal peoples often insinuate homogenous experiences and outcomes.
He often insinuates art into unlikely places, including destroyed homes, toxic landfills, and even popular television shows, investigating how art can provoke greater social awareness and responsibility.

Not exact matches

You put that phrase in there — as you often do — to insinuate ignorance of the people at the time thus saying that because it was so long ago, we can't trust it.
Dietl often used more blunt terms, calling the mayor «Big Bird» and insinuating that he should be in prison.
When I talk about my students, people often ask me if there is something special about them, insinuating that perhaps I teach in a program for gifted children.
He insinuated that «adults» are causing «the trauma,» thus furthering the stereotype of «the hysterical mom» that those who oppose opt - out often evoke.
These are often made optional through various cloaking devices, such as semi-transparent glass panels, long corridors, windows that one may uncomfortably peek through, insinuating the complicity of the viewer.
The Bruce High Quality Foundation, known for their humorous and irreverent projects and performances that often take a subversive and critical stance towards the current market's seemingly insatiable appetite for hyped new artists, answers this question ad nauseum by insinuating the image cum icon of their namesake, Bruce High Quality, into thousands of images from popular culture and art history.
While we are well advised to be cautious in claiming detection, we are even better advised to distrust those who claim, or (as Pielke so often does) do all they can to insinuate that a lack of detection constitutes detection of a lack, while what's really lacking is the guts to say anything they can be pinned down to.
To quash the notion that no valid scientific criticism exists against the idea of man - caused global warming, enviro - activists often say «denier scientists» are paid by the fossil fuel industry to lie about the issue, insinuating a parallel to expert «shills» who did the same for «big tobacco».
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