Word: connect
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...fodder for the punditocracy. But the comments could potentially help Clinton not only in Pennsylvania, but also with winning over undecided superdelegates who might otherwise be reluctant to go against the popular will of the voters. "These comments, and the larger issue of the Obama campaign's inability to connect with these working-class voters, is not a little thing. It's a big thing. And it's a big thing that is likely to end up making a big difference in November," Clinton's new chief strategist Geoff Garin said in an interview with the blog Talking Points Memo...
...These are not trivial matters; Kushner presented views on philosophy, literature and history, challenging us to connect them in a difficult way,” he said...
...Koons soon tired of this sentimentality and felt that he was revealing too much of his sexuality in his work. “I wanted to know about things outside myself,” he says. He found his answers in inflatable objects. Blown-up lobsters and bunnies somehow connect Koons to the external world. For example, the rabbit that appears in so many of his works is a signifier for Playboy, masturbation, and the Easter Bunny, to name just a few. He feels that the layering of cultural meaning that he is able to employ through...
...When you don’t just think technically, but actually connect with other people’s ideas, you can form a solidarity that goes beyond physical projects,” Norman says. “You can really understand them better and they can understand you better...
...almost everyone loves some sport. Leitch writes that people use sports as an escape from their daily lives, a contention that is true but is not the whole story. People of all colors and sizes and walks of life are sports fans, and through sports they are able to connect their otherwise diverse and disparate experiences. Unfortunately, Leitch’s book loses that simple truth in its unrelenting and unsuccessful efforts to both make you laugh and arouse your indignation.But maybe there just isn’t that much to get angry about. At the end of the book...