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Does the little surge of Trump dances across sports represent a wave, or at least a wavelet, of athletes declaring their allegiances for the President-elect?—Louisa Thomas, The New Yorker, 24 Nov. 2024 And importantly, the agency says, despite these wavelets of illness, severe outcomes like hospitalizations and deaths have been dropping since 2020 and 2021.—Brenda Goodman, CNN, 1 Mar. 2024 Some of these gravity waves were caused by air flowing from the northwest over the Appalachians and Alleghenies, which caused downstream wavelets, like ripples downstream of stone in a river.—Matthew Cappucci, Washington Post, 8 Dec. 2023 Now a little rill of wavelets across the surface of the flood was the only thing that marked the river’s usual borders.—Brooke Jarvis, New York Times, 31 May 2023 The word has a natural lilt, a melody that builds to a pitch and gently subsides like a wavelet breaking on a Mediterranean shore.—Paul Richardson, Condé Nast Traveler, 23 Jan. 2023 The wave turned out to be more of a wavelet, with a Senate still so evenly split that control may not be decided until a Dec. 6 run-off in Georgia between Democratic incumbent Raphael Warnock and Republican challenger Herschel Walker.—Susan Page, USA TODAY, 10 Nov. 2022 Alabama’s current wavelet has been going on for about a month.—Ramsey Archibald | Rarchibald@al.com, al, 4 June 2022 All of that has boosted Democratic hopes that November will bring something more akin to a red wavelet than a tsunami.—Mark Z. Barabak, Los Angeles Times, 2 Oct. 2022
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