Usa "pied" in una frase
pied frasi di esempio
pied
1. Pied Piper of Hamlin, n
2. I followed him as if in a trance, like a child being led by the Pied Piper, running, sprinting behind him unable to close the gap between us no matter how hard I tried
3. The philosophers of collective repression, comfortable and tenured, puffing on their pied pipes of illusion, may never intend to go out and do anything themselves to effect their barbaric theories
4. The mother gives me a weird look like perhaps she’s jealous or she thinks I’m the pied piper
5. Hamelin, a town of Prussia where tradition says took place the incidentof the Pied Piper in the year 1284
6. Harold and I followed like she was the pied piper and we
7. pied chair before, and the chair that
8. Angular planets are puppet masters, or Pied Pipers, who have everyone dancing to their tune
9. pied so completely and capped off the sheer ruggedness and beauty
10. pied by the white man, they segregate their own population
11. The moment she stepped out to address rallies, she became the Pied Piper of Amethi
12. pied to pay attention; true to his gender, he was naively hoping
13. They went to Les Halles in the small hours of the morning and had onion soup at Pied de Cochon
14. ' Rafferty headed purposefully for the lodge, feeling like the Pied Piper of Hamelin as Llewellyn, Smythe and most of the still-depleted hospital staff, fell in behind
15. Dryva had told me that he was called the Pied Piper
16. „How come they call you the Pied Piper?' I asked, remembering his nickname
17. would be a great pied a terre” she suggested, “you're right, let's
18. Tiens, quel petit pied! Staunch friend, a brother soul: Wilde's love that dare not speak its name
19. The cycle of birth and death • cosmological analogy • business competitors and value investors eventually cause the death of the crowd • once the crowd disintegrates, a new crowd often starts to form in response to the extended movement of prices • crowd formation causes (and in turn is caused by) excessive price volatility • bearish crowds are different from bullish ones • the 1994-2000 stock market bubble • stock market valuation and Tobin’s q ratio • it’s different this time • the new information economy • shattered dreams • the bear crowd of 2000-2002 • the quest for certainty • the conflict between science and certainty • every opinion has its rationale • instinctual belief • the need for affirmation • pied pipers lead the crowd • mental unity of crowds • intolerance of contrary views • examples from the 1994-2000 bubble • Julian Robertson, Stanley Druckenmiller, and Gail Dudack • Allan Sloan and America Online (AOL) • social and financial pressure on unbelievers • price volatility and homogeneous thinking in crowds • price volatility is one sign that a crowd is mature
20. THE PIED PIPERS OF INVESTMENT CROWDS
21. I liken the rationalizations that emerge in these situations to the Pied Piper of Hamelin
22. During the big move in crude oil prices from $40 in 2004 to $140 in 2008, the pied piper of peak oil played a very seductive tune
23. Here were three pied pipers that enabled the bullish crude oil crowd to grow to enormous size by mid-2008
24. The new economy bubble of 1994-2000 had its own pied pipers
25. One interesting aspect of the bubble was that many of the pied pipers were actual people
26. The bear crowd of 2001-2002 had its own pied pipers, but they were not as plainly visible as the ones that had enabled the preceding bubble
27. The crowd searches for scapegoats, and those it finds become inverted pied pipers, repelling listeners with the dissonant music of their pipes
28. Investors’ human aversion to ambiguity and uncertainty, coupled with their limited capacity for scientific thinking, leaves them vulnerable to pied piper explanations for the run-up or the drop in prices
29. This is what makes them seductive tunes for the pied piper’s pipe
30. The pied pipers of the financial world are the early advocates of these investment themes
31. Heron has described how a pied peacock was eminently attractive to all his hen birds
32. If green woodpeckers alone had existed, and we did not know that there were many black and pied kinds, I dare say that we should have thought that the green colour was a beautiful adaptation to conceal this tree-frequenting bird from its enemies; and consequently that it was a character of importance, and had been acquired through natural selection; as it is, the colour is probably in chief part due to sexual selection
33. 11 17 de pied en cap (Lat caput) 'from head to foot', of Engl
34. --lui tenant pied: 'keeping up with it