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flicker show English

Meaning flicker show meaning

What does flicker show mean?

flicker show

(slang, dated) A film exhibited by means of a film projector.

Examples flicker show examples

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News and current affairs

The cleanup of the Niger Delta provides an ideal opportunity for Nigeria, the oil industry, and the international community to show convincingly that a new age has dawned.
Most importantly, price signals that show the true social costs of energy derived from fossil fuels will encourage innovation and conservation.
Surveys promoted by the BBC tend to show the reverse.
Their financial trust index, based on a large-scale survey of financial decision-makers in American households, did show a sharp fall in trust in late 2008 and early 2009, following the collapse of Lehman Brothers.
Above all, we need to show patience with the new governments of the countries we hope to see evolving toward democracy, and avoid the tendency to expect instant gratification.
The latest Eurostat figures on the evolution of the price index for self-produced goods (GDP deflator) show no tendency whatsoever in the crisis-stricken countries towards real devaluation.
The Iraq war and Israel's wars with Hamas and Hezbollah show the limits of what military power can achieve, as well as vindicate diplomacy and conflict resolution.
Within days, Stanculescu was among those masterminding the show-trial of the Ceausescus which ended with their being sentenced to death and executed on the spot.
Film of Stanculescu at the time show that he had dispensed with his plaster cast.
Several studies show that people who are generous are typically happier and more satisfied with their lives than those who do not give.
And other studies show that giving leads to activity in the reward centers of the brain (the areas of the brain that are also stimulated by tasty food and sex).
Not only do the remarks of French leaders about recreating a multi-polar world arouse alarm, but recent public opinion polls show a decline in the popularity of the US among Europeans and a desire for more independent policies.
Firms will need to show visible restraint when it comes to this year's bonus round.
Many surveys show that it is almost like an addiction, with a short-term benefit leading to long-term unhappiness and remorse.
The EU must instead show leadership through its efforts to solve the world's current problems.
Surveys promoted by financial firms tend to show that trust in them has not diminished much, and that people continue to trust them even more than they do the National Health Service or the BBC.
The data show, intriguingly, that those who show levels of trust well below the average for the country they live in are likely to have lower incomes.
Studies of happiness show that unemployment reduces happiness by as much as the loss of a family member.
If this does not happen within the coming weeks and months, then Turkey will have demonstrated that all this was just a show.
Ferguson is correct that the US will have to come to terms with its budget deficit to maintain international confidence, but, as I show in my book The Future of Power, doing so is within the range of possible outcomes.
In principle, this should help Barack Obama and the Democrats, because polls show them stronger on economic issues, whereas Republicans and John McCain do better on security issues.
If anything, some of Obama's Democratic supporters wish he would show more emotion in responding to criticism.
Numerous opinion polls show Park Geun-hye of the ruling Grand National Party (GNP) to be the leading candidate.

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