Give way!”
Congested roads will give way to parks and pedestrian plazas.
Ultimately, such analogies give way to actual models of how transmission works.
These tree forms gradually give way to pines and sometimes birches as the altitude increases.
French groves of oranges give way to palm-sheltered promenades at the series of Italian resorts.
More importantly, will the rage and fist pumps, the prayers and the songs, give way to enduring change?
Rohatyn was most in the headlines, the world of gentlemen’s agreements he had mastered had begun to give way.
These in turn would then have to stop to give way to those driving onto the roundabout at the next entry point.
Past downturns have seen calls for fiscal support quickly give way to deficit concerns among Republicans and Democrats.
Across the region, the ground is beginning to give way, warping roads, buildings, pipelines, coastlines and river banks.
“The grave dangers that threaten humanity today have to give way to norms that are compatible with human dignity,” the letter said.
Elected imams tended to give way to hereditary dynasties, which then collapsed as a result of family disputes and the resurgence of Ibāḍī ideals.
When President Obama met with John Boehner to negotiate an eleventh-hour deal, the Speaker pressed the President on whether he would give way on defunding Planned Parenthood.
Bottlenecks and supply-chain issues are behind some rising inflation gauges, but it remains to be seen whether those effects subside or give way to broad and concerning price growth.
● When joining a motorway, you should give way to traffic already in lane – many believe drivers on the motorway should give way to those joining, but they actually have the right of way.
“Despite the closeness of the two women,” Baker said, “there’s an agreement among political people that even friendship must give way to necessity – and no one understands that better than Hillary Clinton.”
Once this has been established, it necessarily follows that whatever else these arts may include must give way completely if not compatible with beauty, and, if compatible, must at least be subordinate to it.
The latest flurry of releases has caused a predictable outcry But, if previous experience is anything to go by, this will give way to a resigned acceptance that emptying the Maze is a necessary evil—a tying-up of loose ends after 30 years of conflict.
The EU's negotiating team was keenly aware that it would be easier for Downing Street to discuss compromises on competition regulations - which are far more important to the EU as a whole than fish - after it became clear Brussels would give way on fishing quotas.
As the week progresses we hear more drums, birdsong, wind in the trees, rainforest gibbons, echo-ey acoustics, and shamans - in week two these gradually give way to crowds, the babel of ancient Rome, stonemasons tapping, elephant growls, Indian sitars and Greek oratory.
give way
verb motion
- move in order to make room for someone for something
verb motion
- break down, literally or metaphorically
verb change
- end resistance, as under pressure or force
verb change
- stop operating or functioning
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