Additionally, the Parthenon Marbles have always been on show here free of charge, a generosity unmatched in Athens. |
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The British Museum yesterday received its first official proposal from Greece in its campaign for the return of the controversial Elgin Marbles. |
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But the British Museum caused a sensation in the early 1800s when it dared display the Elgin Marbles. |
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Well, the only real explanation is that Britain is in very bad odour with the Greeks because of the Elgin Marbles. |
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Marbles or taws were usually played along the gutters, much to the annoyance of parents. |
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Greece's attempts to get the British government to return the Elgin Marbles have met another roadblock, this time from within. |
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Geoffrey Robertson and Amal Clooney helped Greece fight for the return of the Elgin Marbles. |
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Parthenon Marbles claimed by Greece were also claimed by UNESCO among others for restitution. |
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North East band Grasscutter will be joining psychedelic shoegaze band The Marbles Jackson on stage tonight. |
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Marbles were among the treasures found buried in the ruins of Pompeii. |
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It is pretentious, in that it uses the ancient Marbles to decorate itself. |
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If all of us insist that the gulab jamuns on the table are marbles, and you alone said they were gulab jamuns, will people think you are sane? |
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The screech modulates into the sound of thousands of marbles clattering against each other at high speed. |
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When Koff unearths the body of a child who has a pocket full of marbles, she muses over the tragedy of the situation. |
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I always figured teacher's sons had closet full of marbles, yo-yos, tin soldiers, tops, tin whistles, Kellogg'Pep buttons and Barlow knives. |
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We used to break old soda water bottles to get at the marbles which were used as stoppers in these bottles. |
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The major rock types in the Masasi area are granitoid gneisses, marbles, schists and quartzites. |
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My country where I was born, I grew up, and on whose streets I played tipcat and marbles, is under occucpation. |
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Kids and teenagers have always gambled, whether at marbles or flipping baseball cards. |
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Maybe he doesn't actually feel like a guy losing his marbles on a full moon night. |
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Several stunning sequences show the earth split apart in massive fissures as people tumble like spilled marbles. |
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His piggy eyes, deep set and sunken in his fat, pink head, glinted like Mercury marbles and darted left and right in confusion. |
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Cigarette cards, along with glass marbles, were staples of the small child's barter system. |
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We used to have freedom and play in the fields with traditional toys such as hoops, a top and whip and marbles. |
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A day later, the moulds were emptied, and out came a hundred brand new shiny speckly blue and green giant marbles. |
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The walls and the floor were covered with variegated marbles, and the roof of cedar wood was covered with lead. |
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The first thunderclap brought down raindrops and hailstones as big as marbles. |
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White and speckled alstroemeria flowers and tapered reed stems combine with cat's eye marbles in a glass vase. |
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Gail nodded and bit her lip again, turning her attention back to the game board and staring at the jumbled patterns of red and yellow marbles. |
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During these centuries scores of collectors who saw themselves as connoisseurs of ancient civilizations brought antique marbles to England. |
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But in his circles all neurological problems were known as having lost one's marbles. |
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Tables are topped with white cloths and round fishbowls holding marbles and floating tea lights. |
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Year five and six children sold cakes and raised money through the guessing the name of the teddy bear and the number of marbles game. |
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The British government has remained steadfast in its refusal to return the marbles. |
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Of the outstanding figures of the period, Henry Howard, 2nd Earl of Arundel, was the first to collect marbles seriously. |
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Sciberras excels in his evaluation of evidence and in technical matters such as the precise identification of all the various marbles. |
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Almost everywhere one can see the names and other writings which the visitors inscribe on the stones and marbles. |
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When Greeks talk about their missing marbles, they are usually referring to Lord Elgin's souvenir-hunting around the Parthenon. |
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Only the works of art, the durable white marbles, have outlasted antiquity to become part of the museum collections of modern Rome. |
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The outline of the field was clearly marked with a border of white marbles about four feet high. |
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Fourth and fifth Century writers describe the richness of its marbles, mosaics, frescoes, and the silver manger replacing the original clay one. |
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He puts on his dressing gown, tearing one of its pockets in his haste, letting marbles scatter across the floor. |
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They would like to ban possession of marbles, golf balls, batteries, as potentials for causing damage as projectiles. |
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She returned with her Chinese checkers board and sack of marbles and then proceeded to set the game up between them. |
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His early experiments involved catapulting marbles across a tub of water in his garden. |
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One was playing with two glass marbles, rolling them from hand to hand, completely ignoring the unearthly commotion going on around him. |
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The object of the game is to capture either 2 marbles of each color, or 3 white, 4 gray, or 5 black marbles. |
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One contains 2 black marbles, another one contains 2 white marbles, and the third contains one black marble and one white one. |
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The main thing I remember about that movie is that I think he threw marbles on the ground and the fellow fell over. |
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In front of the chair, three black children were on their hands and knees playing some kind of game with marbles. |
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She kept herself busy playing whip a top, hoopla, marbles, hopscotch, hide and seek and oranges and lemons. |
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The children also took part in Victorian pastimes such as Throw the Horseshoe, a coconut shy, a tin can alley, marbles and hoop the duck. |
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I was exhilarated to roll these subjects around in my mind like marbles in my hand, and play with their arrangement. |
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For example, hard and even surfaces allow for children to play marbles or hopscotch, or to practice riding a scooter. |
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Outdoor games like marbles, jacks, hopscotch not only occupy your kids, they will also strengthen coordination skills. |
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Buzul-bazi is a game like marbles or dice, played with sheep's knucklebones. |
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This is where Sancho knows his master has lost his marbles since he himself produced this ersatz Dulcinea. |
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He held up a game he was scheduled to pitch because he was playing marbles with children outside the park. |
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He liked to chase fire engines, lead parades and play marbles under the stands between innings of games. |
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Other traditional games such as skipping and marbles are also being brought back in other primary schools. |
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Coins, marbles, safety pins, buttons, crayon pieces, erasers, paper wads, rocks, and beads are also risks. |
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Decades ago, children were always filled with immense pleasure when playing tag, marbles, jumping rubber bands or hopscotch. |
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Chicks should be able to dip only their beaks into the water dish, so place pebbles, marbles, or a screen in the dish. |
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His friends thought it would be a laugh, but they never expected him to stay for almost a year and they start to wonder if he's lost his marbles. |
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She's 81 years old, and up until yesterday I thought she still had all her marbles intact, I'm not so sure now. |
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But as Nietzsche discovered, incessant philosophical thought can also damage one's marbles. |
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There's no hope for him now because he's lost his marbles and has gone completely crazy. |
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Its breath, coming as wind, swirls and marbles the planetary surface, changing the patterns of the clouds. |
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And when he does not get his way threatens to pick up his marbles and go home. |
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Agates, the gold standard of marbles, came in a rainbow of subtle colors with overlaying colored patterns that made them look like beautiful, semi-precious stones. |
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In the photo, Baldwin is staring longingly into the camera, his eyes like two giant marbles, his chin resting in his hand. |
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The game board tumbled to the ground and twenty red and yellow marbles rolled in various directions across the floor, beneath the bed, and under the dresser. |
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Jeez, maybe he had both lost his marbles and gone to his reward! |
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In London it is located in the Duveen Gallery where half the extant marbles sit under white light as if in a morgue. |
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Pupils at Seend School did most of the organisation for the event themselves and thought of ideas for games, including a treasure hunt, marbles and lucky dips. |
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Within that huge space, the marbles will be arrayed around the outside of a rectangular structure that is the same length and width as the Parthenon. |
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Echoing the pleas of the Greeks for the repatriation of the Elgin marbles, Egypt has appealed to the British Museum for the return of the Rosetta Stone. |
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They laid their marbles on the floor and played for an hour. |
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Drive-by vandals hurling rocks and marbles at glass shopfronts are forcing business owners to fear for their safety and bear the cost of thousands of dollars in repairs. |
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His enigmatic assemblages glimmer with glitter, buttons, beads, marbles and plastic toys, bearing what appear to be images of mythic emperors and omniscient eyes. |
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Children play hide-and-seek, hopscotch, round dances, and marbles. |
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He devises a game of marbles, and sits with the child and plays. |
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But as the years went by, Bishop noticed that her son, who loved to play marbles on the ground out back, always seemed to have infected sores on his knees. |
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These include tag, hide-and-seek, kite-flying, marbles, and spinning tops. |
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This has caused such a flurry in Tess's world of education that her school has now banned sledging, along with conkers, marbles, yo-yos and the sack race at school sports. |
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I would hope he would recognize that this is not an appropriate location, pick up his marbles and go home, but we've long since given up hope on that. |
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He and I played games like marbles and shuttlecock and battledore. |
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Boys play marbles, spin tops, fly kites, and play such games as kabaddi. |
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Video of the siege shows some of the passengers armed with marbles and slingshots. |
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Linda Yablonsky tours the ancient treasures and revisits the debate of how the Parthenon lost its marbles. |
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But the Egyptian sculptures at Wilton were unusual, and most contemporary collectors of Greco-Roman marbles would have considered such works barbarous and unpleasing. |
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Smith was a pack rat, collecting marbles, screws, and other odds and ends. |
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For scheelite-dominated deposits, there is the formation of marbles and locally extensive tremolite, silicification, and the development of extensive skarn and hornfels zones. |
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He agrees that Elgin exceeded the terms of his firman, but points out that there were two additional firmans from the Sultan sanctioning the export of the marbles. |
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The choice is unlimited, ranging from marbles, bathroom fittings to furniture to wall paintings and even safe lockers, all of which make a distinct impression to the visitor. |
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The DSM-IV says that the frotteurist and the fuguist, despite all conceivable arguments to the contrary, have lost their marbles, period and end of discussion. |
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If you don't have a glue pot, cover the bottom of a saucepan with marbles or pebbles so as to support the tin can free of the bottom during heating. |
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I overheard these older girls talking about him being a dreamboat but I just see him as Scott, the kid that had to go to the doctor because he swallowed eight marbles whole. |
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The marbles are rounded and have less internal friction to resist shear. |
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He observed two children playing with marbles on the street corner. |
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Anticholinergic toxicity results in a characteristic mumbling, as if the patient is trying to quickly recite a haiku with a mouthful of marbles. |
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Rare marbles, especially overlays, sulphides, clambroths, and other unusual specimens, need gentle washing and drying. |
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Much like marbles, fans of all ages can have fun with these new, exciting collectibles. |
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There were four sizes of marbles and we called them boulders, biggies, regulars, and teenies. |
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Pat Robertson has lost his marbles, seemingly, and after him, who? |
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This time, when we went for all the marbles, we ended with none. |
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That can never happen while the marbles are being held hostage in London. |
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When Gambians went to the polls recently, they used marbles to record their choice of president. |
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Kind of like an amped up game of tic-tac-toe, Pentago is played with marbles on a six-by-six grid consisting of four three-by-three sections. |
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The first tree I knew was an oak under which I played as a small child and gathered large inkballs that I used as marbles. |
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Famous examples of redox conditions affecting geological processes include uranium deposits and Moqui marbles. |
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My collection of marbles consisted mainly of priceless connie agates handed down by Grandpa. |
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Or, to put it another way, Ronald Fergus, middle aged, overweight, underhaired and slightly lacking in the marbles department, was in his kitchen chatting. |
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The renovation includes an expanded product line with an extensive collection of marbles, travertines, granites and stone from all over the world. |
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Thermal metamorphism of the country rock in the contact zone produced coarse grained marbles within the aureole in a small number of places in Teesdale. |
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Getting those marbles off the red carpet was a real heads-up move. |
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Some corners are littered with marbles, off the racing line. |
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You separate the marbles by color until you have four groups, but then you notice that some of the marbles are regulars, some are shooters, and some are peewees. |
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How often have I seen him, intent upon a match at marbles or pegtop, looking on with a face of unutterable interest, and hardly breathing at the critical times! |
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Grandpa's lost his marbles, but at least he still recognizes us. |
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Melanie Sykes slowly losing her marbles, growing narky with campfire stove envy, every night would've been preferable to the dreary Dingo Dollar fancy dress shenanigans. |
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