Smaller notebook computers, now euphemistically called " ultrabooks ", were thinner and smaller than ever.
Those regulations euphemistically describe what Obamacare will do to the cost of insurance for young people.
He has endorsed female genital mutilation as a - which is euphemistically referred to as female circumcision.
The bonanza is ultimately due to what is euphemistically called taxpayers largesse, which will only grow in time.
"We had a wee bit of a disagreement, putting it euphemistically, " said Brown.
Why, only became clear several weeks later when a letter arrived from Swiss railways euphemistically named "revenue protection service".
On the other hand, one could euphemistically say that Coach Tressel strategically misrepresented and under-reported the facts as he knew them.
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In fact, what the global taxers euphemistically call "innovative sources of financing" and "solidarity levies to fund development" are already being imposed.
Counterinsurgency operations place a premium on different weaponry and tactics than would conflicts with what are now euphemistically called "peer" or "near-peer" competitors.
The FDA issued what's euphemistically known as an "approvable" letter, saying that Provenge could be approved in the future if Dendreon passes more hurdles.
But the magnitude of Chek Lap Kok's euphemistically named "teething problems" suggest that it was a long way from being ready on July 6.
But exempting itself from losses in the event of what is euphemistically called "official-sector involvement, " or OSI, may not be that easy for the fund.
Many would also put a free press on that list - and what the World Bank euphemistically calls "higher public participation in public policy formulation".
In what are (sometimes euphemistically) called the developing countries, one year seems to follow the next without any booms or busts, just deadness in the water.
In India it is euphemistically referred to as "eve teasing", in Japan groping on the subway has long been a problem, and the attack on Lara Logan in Egypt gained international attention.
If these groups have remained (relatively) coherent, the next stage of the battle for Mali could comprise what is euphemistically known as "assymetrical warfare" -- suicide bombings, IEDs and assassinations.
It is time to draw a firm line against what the UN euphemistically calls 'innovative funding mechanisms' and John Bolton is the man to do it on the East River.
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It means around the country, there are tens of thousands of incidents of what is euphemistically called "unrest" every year, and land seizure lie at the heart of many of them.
In solitary -- also called "the box" and "the hole" by prisoners, or euphemistically, "segregation" and "special housing" by corrections officials -- inmates have virtually no social contact, except for occasional transactions with guards.
Its military is accused of forcing roughly 200, 000 women, mainly from Korea and China, to serve as sex slaves -- they were known euphemistically as "comfort women" -- for soldiers in the Imperial Army.
If the Putin-Medvedev regime gets away unscathed with this violent reassertion of authority over what it euphemistically calls the "Near Abroad, " all of its once-enslaved neighbors will once again be at risk of Moscow's predations.
But when it comes to "eve teasing" (as this practice is euphemistically called), I would argue the opposite: It is precisely the stubborn hold of India's prudish culture that has made many Indian men so callow.
Last week, Vice President Joe Biden offered the latest - and arguably the clearest - evidence of Team Obama's strategy for victory in what was once euphemistically known as the "War on Terror": Define down the enemy.
The idea of charges for university education (euphemistically known as top-up fees) strikes fear into the hearts of parents neither poor enough to benefit from state hand-outs nor rich enough not to feel the pinch of high tuition fees.
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What Noda refers to euphemistically as a "socialist system" in the countryside has helped push Japan into what Moody's notes is the highest level of debt for any major economy since the end of World War II: 140% of GDP.
They and, for that matter, supporters of the war effort can legitimately feel frustration that the "security situation in Iraq" (as it is euphemistically known) has not been stabilized before now in Baghdad and other persistent areas of insurgent activity.
That will be especially true if, as is also predictable, the Israelis are blamed for the outcome for not being willing enough in the face of Palestinian intractability to make what are euphemistically called "painful" moves for peace.
This in turn led, directly and inexorably, to the rollback of the Soviet expansion in the southern latitudes, to the liberation of the captive nations in its hegemony euphemistically called satellites, and, finally, to the dissolution of the USSR itself.
Brown banquettes upholstered in what the French euphemistically call moleskin but North Americans know as leatherette line both walls of the long, narrow railroad-car-like dining room, and there's a little bar just inside the front door where your bill is tallied and taxis are called.
Even the Bush administration has reportedly begun contingency planning to start a draw-down this fall irrespective of the circumstances on the ground in response to an expected domestic political imperative demanding what is euphemistically called a "new strategy" come September.
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