Sentences with phrase «sometimes earlier generations»

Purebred registration papers (from one of many kennel clubs or other dog registries) are only a record of a puppy's parents (and sometimes earlier generations).

Not exact matches

The large and growing amount of solar generation has occasionally driven power prices on the CAISO power exchange during late winter and early spring daylight hours to very low, and sometimes negative, prices.
To deal with the design flaws of age - graded schools, earlier generations of reformers, sometimes called «progressives,» created differentiated instructional programs.
«Puppy mills often fail to screen breeding dogs for hereditary disorders and this results in generations of dogs with defects that can lead to painful lives and sometimes even early deaths,» Goodwin says.
While more contained projects such as London Heist, Batman: Arkham VR and Until Dawn: Rush of Blood achieve impressive character models and scenic details, more complex and processor - intensive games — DriveClub VR for example — sometimes have the look of earlier generation PlayStation titles.
In New York of the late 70s and early 80s artists like Jack Goldstein, Cindy Sherman, Richard Prince and Sherrie Levine were sometimes called the Pictures Generation.
He chronicled Beat Generation poets and writers; the folk musicians who gathered around Washington Square in the early 1960s, including Bob Dylan and Joan Baez; Vietnam War demonstrations and anti-AIDS rallies; and every other social protest that took place Downtown — and sometimes Uptown, too.
Professor Rosenblum does himself less than justice: he is neither the simple mainline neoconservative that he pretends or the swinging elder statesman evoked by his repeated claims of solidarity with «art historians... of a younger generation» and «anyone under forty,» but an original and sometimes brilliantly eccentric critic, distinguished among other things for his persuasive work on the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries as well as for his astonishingly early and penetratingly intelligent recognition of Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, and Frank Stella.
In principle, no doubt, it differs little from the modus operandi of the occasional judge, familiar to an earlier generation of counsel, who would pick up his pen (sometimes for the first time) and require the favoured advocate to address him at dictation speed.
Then from the early 80s to 2000 exists the Millenials, or sometimes called Generation Y.
Sometimes labeled as «Generation Y,» Millennials are people born between the early 1980s and the early 2000s.
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