The euro zone is in a crisis, in the correct sense of the word, a turning point from which it will either recover or enter a terminal phase.
Photos of the two employees using the cockpit in a literal sense of the word have been spreading in China via blogs and social media this month.
Owned by Prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz, the Saudi Defence Minister and son of the late King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, the Al Salamah is not a yacht in the true sense of the word.
"Any employee who is not creating value does not have a real job in the MBM sense of the word, " Koch writes, although a worker on the assembly line might consider his weekly paycheck real enough.
Newt Gingrich is an angry politician and he's picking up on a sense of resentment, that some of the elite (a favourite word in America at the moment) have escaped crash and crisis - and indeed have made money out of it.
No, not particularly what some nurses currently do, prescribe, give injections and so on, but in the older sense of the word, as in nursing a baby.
FORBES: Bending The Health Care Cost Curve: Fire the Doctors
The navigation, at first glance, feels overdone in a Ms. Pacman sense of the word, but in application proved efficient at forewarning a non-Angeleno native about upcoming lane changes and turns.
But in everything except the strict accounting sense of the word Mr Ashcroft has become a liability.
What is evident is that the relations between ministers and mandarins are at a crisis, in the strict medical sense of that word: that is to say, they are at a point at which they will either get better, or drastically worse.
"Insurance people are naturally conservative in the bad sense of the word, " Goodman says with a shrug.
The Internet is still a wilderness in the best sense of the word.
The fact that Mr Hirst in sharp contrast to Mr Doig, who produces only six or eight paintings a year has been able to produce enough work to fill 223 lots has to do with the fact that he is no longer an artist, in the normal sense of the word, but the head of a global brand selling instantly recognisable work that is made in factories.
Consider this: the modern smartphone is a personal computer in every sense of the word.
ENGADGET: Editorial: Should your next mobile OS update cost you?
The Vatican Bank - known officially as the Institute for Works of Religion - has hitherto exempted itself from international banking regulations on the grounds that it is not a real bank in the normal sense of the word, our correspondent says.
Today, the hip-hop impresario has evolved into a celebrity, in the truest sense of the word.
The aesthetics of a service like Readability are hugely important in enabling that sense of intimacy, that pleasure in the written word that readers crave.
What they are being forced to go through now is -- in the most elemental sense of this word -- a shame.
"Trevor Storton was a legend in the true sense of the word, " his former team-mate, keeper Grenville Millington told the Chester Leader.
Well sure, when you put it that way, the use of the word disorder makes a little sense.
He is a champion in every sense of the word and while he is at the helm, this series is well and truly alive and kicking.
Dr. Faust called edX a startup "in every sense of the word, " adding that the site is searching for its business model, which could involve licensing course content and charging for certain offerings, such as executive business courses.
And Junie was a true original, in every sense of the word.
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Google is a technology company, in every sense of the word.
FORBES: A $1,000 Price Target on Google is Not That Far-Fetched
Once the posture test was over the participants received their new statuses and the researchers measured their implicit sense of power by asking them to engage in a word-completion task.
ECONOMIST: How you hold yourself affects how you view yourself
"This sweeping authority is said to exist even if the threat presented isn't imminent in any ordinary sense of that word, even if the target has never been charged with a crime or informed of the allegations against him, and even if the target is not located anywhere near an actual battlefield, " Mr Jaffer added.
General JACK KEANE (U.S. Army, Retired): I think there's probably a sense of relief in the Pentagon, if you were looking for one word to describe it.
As has been pointed out innumerable times since, if Iraq turns out to be a truly "great achievement" in any ordinary sense of the word, Mr. Biden and Barack Obama - two of the most insistent opponents of George W. Bush's efforts to consolidate Iraq's liberation - are among the last people in Washington who should take such credit.
His wiry physical presence suggests a young man who is as hungry in every sense of the word as he is angry.
WSJ: Look Back in Anger | Still Angry After All These Years | Theater Review by Terry Teachout
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