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1
You never see this placement in private homes but it's
become
de
rigueur in nice hotels.
2
In my own memories of Japanese travel, these shapes have
become
de
rigueur, as picturesque detail.
3
At Midland, roommates will
become
de
facto family members for the purposes of social distancing and wearing masks.
4
It will
become
de
facto supervisor for chunks of eastern European banks that are owned by euro zone lenders.
5
It also appears that inflation expectations, both of professional forecasters and households, have
become
de
-
anchored
below the Fed's target.
6
The result has been that some of the voluntary measures in the three previous sanctions resolutions have
become
de
facto mandatory.
7
Since executing the first step, when it bought 45 percent of Alliance Boots, relocating domiciles to save on taxes has
become
de
rigueur.
8
It has
become
de
rigueur to despise empires, but they have been the "normal" mode of governance for much of history.
9
It seems to me if this State "allows" someone to
become
de
facto Irish, then this State has an obligation to that person.
10
It has
become
de
rigueur for any chef or cook worth their salt to source as much as they can from the area around them.
11
Then came the web and e-commerce, where automated personalization quickly
became
de
rigueur.
12
Under the Treaty of Berlin in 1878, Serbia
became
de
jure an independent country.
13
Appears you're
becoming
de
facto coroner, young lady.
14
After backpacks became faddish among schoolboys and schoolgirls, they also
became
de
rigueur for fashionable women.
15
For example, at one point it
became
de
rigueur to put groups of ornaments in the ground.
16
A number of proprietary features
became
de
facto standards and then official standards with some ending up in the HTML5 specification.