California draws visionaries, seekers, nutters and pseudo-scientists, many with sci-fi dreams roaring in their ears. |
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A sampling of the Egyptian diet draws the rapt attention of a whole family. |
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A kaleidoscopic wall behind the sushi bar draws people into this Japanese restaurant. |
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In addressing such questions the paper draws on certain aesthetic formulations of the Hindu rasa theory. |
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Every degree of added warmth only whets the fishes' appetites and draws them nearer to the flats. |
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Then again, it's not only the sense of community that draws these artists together. |
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The book, with compelling lucidity, draws the reader into a rare mix of erudite scholarship and sheer readability. |
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As death draws near, evocative, atmospheric images are offered up to the reader. |
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Once settled, she draws up her feet and sits cross-legged on the squashy chair. |
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However, the music he makes today draws upon and recombines a range of musical resources, including rap as well as the blues of his antecedents. |
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The outskirts of space are wild indeed and those with the fastest draws and the quickest wits are the only ones to survive. |
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The lure of good money draws professional drivers from many countries to Iraq, but sometimes the whole story is different than you might think. |
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McGovern gives the story believable characters, a cracking pace and draws out themes that make it relevant for today. |
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Then, as the duck draws its foot forward and brings the toes together, the web folds up so there is less resistance to the water. |
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After the cards have been shuffled, each player draws a card from the pack. |
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It draws from existing case law and fits well within good human resources practice. |
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The special children's raffle was most exciting, the draws supervised by the officer board ensured that everything was above board. |
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He draws two olives above the horizontal line, and shades everything but the pimentos. |
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It is the occasion for a rambunctious Carnival celebration that draws more than half a million people each year to Santo Domingo. |
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Arellano draws interesting parallels between Morrissey's music and Mexico's ranchera music tradition. |
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A director's loan arises when a director advances money to or draws money out of a company. |
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He jumps to his feet and draws an imaginary line down the middle of the table. |
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He's a Renaissance man who is incredibly well-read, draws upon an enormous breadth of experience, and has an astonishing memory. |
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The region's timber draws truckloads of migrant workers who come to cut its prized mahogany, an expensive hardwood in high demand overseas. |
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It also draws attention away from the very considerable amounts of extra tax the Government is raising. |
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They quickly need to turn draws into wins at home and start to turn defeats into draws away. |
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Most of all, she said she draws to keep her late mother's and grandmother's spirit alive. |
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After having the better of two hard-fought draws he won game three to take the overnight lead. |
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Continue to look at them and their placid, inoffensive appearance draws you in with a curious and unexpected power. |
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Many local companies will offer sampling and tastings during the promotion in addition to special offers and customer prize draws being held. |
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O'Brian's live shows are noted for the way in which he draws in his audience. |
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A reclining woman seems to turn her body as he draws and redraws her folded legs. |
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In one example, he exuberantly adds a tube's worth of cadmium orange as he draws the simple outline, caught up in the enjoyment of painting. |
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It draws equally on techno hip-hop experimentation and Japanese collage-pop alchemists. |
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If draws are removed, we will see better matches with teams playing all out attacking football. |
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Likewise, the reader draws ethical consequences from the process of allegorization and emotive investment. |
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The cognitive outer mask that we often live in, or at least I used to live in, it sort of draws you away from who you really are. |
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As wastewater is applied to the top of a bed of sand, gravity draws it down between the sand particles. |
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One performance that always draws a crowd is sinten, in which magicians exhibit their powers. |
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The concluding chapter draws together the diverse strands of alterity explored to that point while examining alterity in history. |
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Movies have long been a magnet for scrutiny, hysteria or moral panics, though obviously television now draws much of that dubious attention. |
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The cleanup drew shoreside development, which, in turn, draws landlubbers to the waterfront every day. |
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The lattice pattern on the front of her blouse, unlike Viola's, draws sensual attention to her bust line. |
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All this concern for addition, layering, and amplification buries the ostensible subject of the novel and instead draws attention to itself. |
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Unlike a dolly or tracking shot, the zoom draws attention to itself as something that someone behind the camera is actually executing. |
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As you can imagine, having such high profile talent draws a sizable crowd of followers. |
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Ploughing a wide furrow, this record draws on a history of influences from hip hop, funk, soul, and big beat. |
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Afternoon teatime, in particular, draws people out their offices and away from their solitary pursuits. |
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The action scarcely draws breath in 300-odd pages of rowdy doings and closet skulduggery. |
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However, the raw emotion in the vocals and the simplistic backing draws your attention and forces you to give the lyrics a chance to shine. |
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Fish are more tightly shoaled at this time of year and a few good draws could make all the difference. |
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The first paper draws our attention to the concept of manifest destiny and current war discourse in the American context. |
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Stepan shows how the artist also draws on non-African artistic sources, including mannerist motifs by Edvard Munch. |
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It is the very depth of his miserliness which draws us all, young and old, into the story. |
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It is an association of place and memory that draws him to interlace the past with the present. |
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Agecroft Hall, a Tudor manor house, was shipped to the United States piece by piece and now draws 20,000 visitors each year. |
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There's enough material here perhaps for a half-hour bagatelle, but Brooke fatally draws things out well beyond that. |
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The camera draws back revealing 14 more rugby players performing the haka and dressed in red and black striped rugby shirts. |
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The paper draws an analogy between the binomial theorem and the successive derivatives of the product of functions. |
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It draws on his experiences while working for a builder in Hastings, where he settled in 1902 after various wanderings. |
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Instead, academia sometimes draws criticism for apparently doing research for its own sake. |
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By contrast, the fire-walking ceremony draws heavily on cosmological notions even though the humanistic dimension is not absent. |
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He draws on a roll of tobacco, which provides him warmth and grants yet another form of slow death. |
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Here Pukes draws widely on numismatic evidence to show that the titles and authority granted to Christ challenge those claimed by the Emperor. |
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Using a sharp instrument, Verster then draws and scratches patterns and images into this surface, revealing the strata of yellow beneath. |
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She draws a metaphor for how this is contrary to her work with children and adolescents. |
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Four draws on the trot in the league have not helped their hopes for promotion. |
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It would also be a start to make sure no one else disappears for an early bath or draws a needless suspension before the summer. |
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According to Fischoff, this approach draws from humanistic psychology, with its emphasis on self-actualization and personal growth. |
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It has become an annual fun event which aids charities and draws support from across Greater Manchester. |
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From the time the draws were made Sean Dempsey had targeted this game as the crucial tie of the championship. |
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Frank Brennan draws his lecture to a close with a recapitulation of his main points. |
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There is a definite Irish feeling to their sound, which draws on the kings of Irish rock and progressive trad, as well as more modern influences. |
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Women have been going to sea in the RN for 14 years, so the prospect of a female commanding officer of a destroyer or frigate draws ever nearer. |
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That's when Sofia draws your attention to a chalet perched on a shoulder of the slope, just over a mile away. |
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The two top draws for the WWF in the last year were seconds away from going toe to toe. |
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Sam Walton reinvented logistics, turning a five-and-dime into Wal-Mart Stores Inc, which draws almost 140 million shoppers a week. |
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Fortune smiled on guests who received prizes in lucky draws throughout the evening. |
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Le Guen had rejigged his team significantly after two draws with Dundee United and Dunfermline had exposed some early glitches. |
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In Virpal about an hour's drive from Amritsar, a widow draws water from a handpump. |
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Mist on the mountain draws me back sun on the sea so grand steam trains puffing on the railroad track away in the Isle of Man. |
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She draws a long whip gently across their backs and legs to get them used to ropes and lassos as their forebears would have been. |
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This approach draws parallels between similarity judgments and analogic comparisons. |
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The green blur of the commuter train as it speeds in the night draws a streak of light like a zoetrope, one of the many visual surprises. |
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It's the sight that draws millions of ' leaf peepers ' to the U.S. each October and November. |
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Inspiration draws from urban warriors re-invented into the subversive capsule collection. |
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For Barthes, film animates the photograph, which for him is distensive and retentive, and draws the photograph forth into protensiveness. |
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With each retelling, he draws the silences out a little further and intones each word more forcefully. |
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The US National Research Council draws attention to one special feature about the capybara as food. |
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The model draws on previous work looking at, among other things, induced innovation. |
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We must do all we can to safeguard the natural heritage that draws campers and caravanners to the area. |
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Not content with that, Malkmus will often tack on a coda that draws on ragtime, rap and showtunes in equal measure. |
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He draws attention to survivals of shamanistic cults from early modern times to the present. |
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The author also draws on research on language attitudes, contrastive analysis of Navajo and English, and discourse strategies. |
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There is thus far less likelihood of stalemates or draws forming in the game. |
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In the way that he apposes the images and varies the pauses, he draws us into the evening's movement and its paradoxically calming effect. |
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A full stomach draws blood to the belly and away from the brain, leaving you listless and dull. |
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A second argument draws from the appearance of design in the universe the conclusion that there must be a Designer. |
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McGuinness sinks another beer, draws nervously on his cigarette and lets his attention wonder from his bag for one, maybe two minutes. |
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As the year's major league March 31 opener at Anaheim draws closer there is as yet no pay deal between the players and owners. |
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As each year draws to a close, many newspaper and magazine articles offer basic year-end tax planning ideas. |
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In the shallow draws between the hills, little bluestem and bunchgrass and western wheatgrass bow in a breath of hot wind, and are still again. |
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Cabo Matapalo, at the tip of the peninsula, draws surfers to its famous right point breaks. |
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The report draws on the 1996 and 2001 censuses, which contain a 10 percent and 16 percent undercount, respectively. |
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The film doesn't take itself too seriously, but draws on raw emotion and features a talented ensemble cast. |
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For an artist who paints and draws the conventional genres of still life, landscape, portraits and figures, he is surprisingly high-profile. |
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He draws the projected image, turns the lights back on and slowly brings the painting up from a monochrome to a colored underpainting. |
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Of the four Gospels, the movie apparently draws mostly from the Book of John. |
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Through global sourcing, the company draws materials, components, machinery, finance, and services from anywhere in the world. |
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The literary masterpiece Barrow draws on to illumine the path of conversion and repentance is Dante's Purgatorio. |
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Jonny Quest's brand of two-fisted action draws from all of these themes, updated with a strong undercurrent of cold war science. |
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The awareness of death is an invisible attractor that draws me to what is important in my life. |
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Best Mate is not a horse who draws gasps of astonishment with an exuberant leap or a sudden blinding burst. |
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With a warm and friendly atmosphere, it draws an eclectic crowd of artists and business types. |
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Every time this folk singer sings in her guttural voice, she draws a motley audience around her courtyard. |
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The fun and games included a music by a traditional Xinjiang trio, dancing by Uighur girls in revealing outfits, lucky draws and games. |
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She draws some truly eloquent sounds from the organ, which though relatively young, is an instrument of incomparable celestial beauty. |
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And the highways and skyways are expected to be jammed today as the Thanksgiving weekend draws to a close. |
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In one video work, he makes a blackboard of the sky and then, using a skywriter for chalk, draws a rough star in the air. |
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Timothy parted Nadia's hair on the side which draws attention to her beautiful eyes. |
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To her learning is a process that draws on emotional, cerebral and physical faculties. |
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Indeed, he draws determinate conclusions only about the people who respond to the sense of transcendence or about the characters in their novels. |
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As she draws close to the Sun she disappears from view in her helical setting, circling the Earth invisibly masked by the Sun's light. |
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The Senate must keep its moral priorities firmly in mind as the vote on banning therapeutic cloning draws close. |
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As the twentieth century draws to a close, connoisseurs of colonial nostalgia are, unsurprisingly, having a thin time of it. |
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Love as glorified by poets draws the common man's inherent curiosity to unimaginable extents. |
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As the year draws to a close, a plethora of sports books is hitting the bookshops. |
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On the outside, its bold, curvaceous form draws plenty of commentary, both flattering and otherwise. |
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He draws science and aliens, nature and mathematics, pagan icons and purity in beauty. |
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First, he strews dark sand across a white surface, then he draws images with his fingers and when the whole picture is ready he films it. |
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When art draws on this information it resonates with our sense of essential selfness, and we experience the aesthetic value as happiness. |
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According to Ruaridh, orgone is the sexual energy that flows through the body, and the apparatus draws it out to relieve stress. |
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His self-analysis in paint draws us in as analysts who are also, as Baudelaire would have put it, his semblables, his spiritual kin. |
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In most species, the head carries a corona of cilia that draws a vortex of water into the mouth, which the rotifer sifts for food. |
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This chapter has an eerie, sombre feeling which draws their investigation to a close. |
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Maynard draws upon bebop, jazz, funk, swing, classical and contemporary music to create a fresh sound within the classical big band form. |
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This report also draws attention to the unmet needs of those with psychosis and substance abuse or dependence. |
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Coffee specifically draws toxins from the liver through the mesentery of the small intestine. |
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As the round draws to a close, so the course meanders its way down from the hillside and back to sea level. |
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A serang is a person of importance, far above a stoker, though the stoker draws better pay. |
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These early sitcom-style moments contain much of the humour and charm that really draws us into the world of these characters. |
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It draws kestrels, gray herons, falcons, and, for your life-list, occasional rare purple herons, Egyptian vultures, and oystercatchers. |
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By way of contrast, Guillermo Kuitca draws on a family history of displacement and diaspora. |
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Dealing with life outside and inside of prison, All Things Censored draws us into parallel universes populated by people struggling for humanity. |
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The piercing call of a bellbird draws attention to a soundtrack of bush noises. |
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Clay, wood and stone are his mediums while he draws inspiration from Indian, Egyptian, Hittite and Inca traditions. |
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After shooting the first 5 balloons, he holsters one gun, draws the second and goes after the last 5 balloons. |
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From the other side of the duck pond, Pete draws his flintlock and fires at the boat. |
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And the woman draws herself up and delivers a stirring dialogue on her right to stay there and earn an honest living. |
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Crooning, as its title suggests, draws on the sound of big bands and big-band singers. |
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Feminist critique here draws on the energies of Kantian moral theory to think, in a challenging way, about the concerns of the present. |
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We should devise a system that draws on both national courts and an international tribunal. |
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The report draws on meetings with senior government officials, including the Prime Minister, the chancellor, and the deputy prime minister. |
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To achieve this aim it draws on biology, biochemistry, engineering, mathematics and computer science. |
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When Mrs C draws a clock face, or copies a picture of a flower, she omits much or all of the left side. |
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The alley is perfumed with the smell of excellent Thai cooking that draws you inside, up an uneven stairway to the restaurant. |
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A government sponsored, codified system of traditional medicine draws on elements of Chinese and Indian medicine. |
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Biography draws much of its power from its factuality, from relating what life really handed out to real people. |
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She draws links to legal culture, common visual imagery, and Franciscan spiritual currents. |
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Sheldon lopes to one end of the blackboard, raises his chalk and, with a quick flourish, draws a circle. |
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First, it draws on and shares the collective knowledge of the people in the room. |
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We can expect a protracted tug of war, which may drag on until the review deadline draws near. |
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Oliver Twist draws most overtly on the model of the didactic tracts by providing negative monitory examples. |
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It sounds utterly inappropriate as the leaves turn, night draws in and Wales floods. |
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His music videos are heavy draws on YouTube, and he's a relentless Tweeter. |
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This allows the steel to be twisted like a rope before additional hammering draws it to the flat configuration needed for a knife blank. |
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Stephen draws a parallel between someone who would spy while pretending to be a friend, and what Matthew did to Absalom. |
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Here, Lemon clearly draws a parallel between the rural folk traditions of China and black Southern culture in the United States. |
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I would argue that in all three works, Clovio draws a parallel between the Roman artistic canon and religious orthodoxy. |
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She draws a parallel between the disenfranchised state of women and minorities in the nineteenth century and into the present. |
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He draws a parallel between intrusive imagery in trauma and the unexpected visual and auditory imagery that may occur about the deceased. |
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We're a neighborhood restaurant that draws from all over the city because we're directly across the street from the public transit hub. |
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Its ultra-fresh, delicate fragrance draws on cardamom, citron, geranium and coriander. |
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He draws our attention to the means of his art and invites our participation in the construction of its meaning. |
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When a mujtahid draws judgments based on a hadeeth, it is an indication of its being sound in his opinion. |
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In virtually every one Turner draws the architecture in pencil and then covers this under-drawing with washes of pale colour. |
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In fact, as spring draws on the weather around Highbury seems generally clement. |
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The hypertonicity of the radiopaque agent draws fluid into the bowel to facilitate passage and expulsion of the tenacious meconium. |
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As the close season draws to an end many hundreds of professional footballers face an uncertain future. |
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The author has a distinctive, idiosyncratic style that draws you in and keeps you reading. |
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So what Perlstein has to say is important in my opinion because it draws upon old lessons learned that I think should not go unforgotten. |
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The reader too draws back and shares his incomplete understanding along with his respect for his mother. |
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In addition, however, the speaker's unrelenting hyperbole draws attention to the incredibility of his praise of the Sidneys. |
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He pulls out a phrase book, draws a lot of attention to himself that he didn't want. |
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Pappy unlimbers his double-barrel, 12 gauge sawed-off shotgun and Tom draws one of the two handguns tucked in his belt, a 1911.45 auto. |
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It uses mostly electric instruments, but draws heavily on indigenous styles and themes. |
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The article draws on both primary and secondary data to examine the media's role in an emergent democracy. |
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I keep whistling the magnificent Eric Idle soft-shoe number with which Life of Brian draws to a close. |
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The draws for the state lottery look place in the Guildhall in London before a noisy and enthusiastic crowd. |
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This wealth of sample-worthy material draws Axelrod's brilliance to light even further. |
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It draws most heavily on internal medicine, paediatrics, obstetrics and gynaecology, surgery, psychiatry and preventive medicine. |
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Bookish and academic, Snyder is at the same time a friendly sort whose soft-spoken demeanor draws people in. |
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The caliber of conversation in the pod has also taken a nosedive as the blessed date draws nigh. |
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Thus, my look and in depth coverage of Roman cuisine draws nigh to a close. |
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As the time for outrageously big prizes draws nigh, I want to give a very special thanks to the people who made it all possible. |
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The oscillating effect necessarily draws upon all that is absent, creating an inevitable and disturbing condition of dissociation. |
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First, behind closed doors, the council enters into partnership agreements and draws up plans. |
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I watch in horror as the figure draws a bag into the entryway, closing the door silently. |
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If all players are even, then they stand up from the table and each draws from the deck, as if it were the beginning of the game. |
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Pick mint early in the morning because the sun draws out some of the plant's essential oils. |
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Instead, he draws from his background in experimental jazz and spoken word. |
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To begin the game, each player draws tiles from their bags to their hands, one at a time, until reaching a double domino. |
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It's most noticeable in the quiet scenes where he draws nothing from his face except expressionlessness. |
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The wicking action of the soil draws water into the pot as the plants drink it up. |
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Threats to sue the Football League and create a new competition with no offsides or draws were just farcical. |
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Each state then draws single-member districts to conform with the census apportionment. |
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Like Michael Brecker, he's absorbed a lot of Coltrane but his harmonic language draws as much from funk and soul as much as jazz. |
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As the election draws near I must be careful to avoid bias, such is the frightening influence of the diary. |
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His still-life objects, of course, remain secular, but he endows them with an almost sacramental aura, into which he draws the scullery maid. |
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Rather, like oppressed people everywhere, he draws integrity from inner resources. |
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Table Mountain draws local holidaymakers as well as tourists from the four corners of the globe. |
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Comparable to Nobody's soft-rocking West Coast sunbursts, the headshop hip hop of Edan's second album also draws on flavours of '60s psych rock. |
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Palaeoethnobotany, as a field of inquiry, draws upon several types of archaeobotanical analyses. |
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The play draws a connection between this shame and cultural silence about rape and sexual abuse. |
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The finals of the younger groups are normally played as warm-ups to the main draws on the glass court. |
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Ude draws on his own experience as the editor of aRUDE, a quarterly of fashion and culture published in New York. |
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His work draws upon archival documents, published sources, and legal cases. |
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Later on, when the wine and water have got thoroughly mixed, he draws off another jarful and again fills up the pitcher with water. |
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Sometimes dubbed a modern-day Lowry, he draws upon his Midlands background to produce quirkily humorous work with universal themes. |
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Any anthology of Lennon's work draws comparisons with his songwriting partner. |
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The fighter draws a slug from a water bottle, swishes it round his mouth, fixes the kid with a grin and lets him have it, right between the eyes. |
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This too is a bizarre exercise in appetitiveness and lip-smacking, but it at least draws attention to the issue. |
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On the balcony, a woman kneels and draws a picture while a robed, spectral figure nearby seems to be ladling water into another tank. |
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He draws arabesques with charcoal and thinned black acrylic, creating labyrinths of interconnected markings often structured by a loose grid. |
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Ronaldo rushes into the area and draws a decent save from Mirzapour with his left foot. |
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In other words, the blues is about having lived whereas the violin draws heavily on a technical ability that can be gained in a practice room. |
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Kurosawa draws the best possible performances from these actors by staying true to the source's roots as a play. |
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From the museum rotunda, a huge angular mirror draws you into the exhibition space. |
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He draws sensitively and suggestively upon the work of Dante, Faulkner, and Flannery O'Connor, mining their theological lode. |
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A new round of global trade negotiations is moving closer to being launched, as the six-day ministerial meeting in Doha draws to a close. |
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The Politics of Memory also draws attention to the artfulness of his earlier works. |
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This fascinating CD draws on the talents of composers who have set his poetry to music, interspersed with readings from his works. |
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These toons not only grew Cartoon Network's audience by triple digits, they beat out late night old-schoolers for draws of 18-to 24-year-olds. |
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The crop draws nutrients from the water before it is returned to the rivers, still clean and unpolluted. |
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To explicate this paradigm, the study, in addition to the tenets of border theory, draws on the insights of historicism and postcolonial theory. |
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Isaac draws the portrait of the solitaire as it was described to him by a very old man who had seen one of the last of that strange species. |
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Since, most of the wisdom that New Age draws upon, is based upon Ancient Wisdom. |
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Being fake, The News on the March newsreel near the beginning draws precise attention to cinema's ability to concoct the truth. |
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Atwood validly draws a connection between Chopin and Delacroix in their hatred of romantic anarchy and disorder. |
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I leave this record as penance for my own conscious, as my death draws nigh. |
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His work draws upon a variety of influences ranging from travel to music and film. |
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Sure Byron has the sea, and draws major domestic and international tourism via it. |
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As my time as School Captain draws to a close, I have been reflecting on my six years as a student at Box Hill High School. |
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In his book, he draws on one novel or film to illuminate each article of the Apostle's Creed. |
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Her amiable vignettes recall '40s or '50s illustrations, and she draws on the figurine tradition in form and material if not in subject matter. |
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The vapour trails of jet planes criss crossing the skies draws my eye away from my daily routine. |
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Light weight and springy, this fabric is non-allergenic, dries quickly, draws moisture away from the body and is washable. |
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Both past and future are sacramentally present in Orthodox Eucharistic worship, which draws the church now into the worship of the coming Kingdom of God. |
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The final principle is one of holism, which draws together the technical, organizational, and cultural aspects of technology and aims at a synthesis of science and religion. |
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Iacobini aptly draws a comparison between the representation of this church and that in the lunette mosaic of the southwest vestibule of Hagia Sophia. |
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In a country where most identify themselves as mestiza, Mexico's anti-globalization movement draws much of its energy from indigenous communities. |
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Through organizing and activism, he has created a multiracial political movement that draws thousands of people every week. |
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Away from the world of wine-and-cheese openings and quickie television interviews, Gandhy's public-spiritedness draws him to causes like a moth to a candle. |
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A hipster belt draws attention to your curves without going overboard. |
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He also draws a parallel between the struggles for status among nineteenth-century black South Africans and similar movements of the twentieth century. |
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For purposes of example, he draws a parallel between increase in land values and the rising earnings of a newspaper because of the growth of a community. |
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As the year draws to a close, these goals remain unfulfilled and the news from CAR continues to be harrowing. |
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But, while chastened by the experience, he also draws strength from it. |
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A notary draws up the act which is the legal evidence of the pope's death. |
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The event draws together undergraduates, graduates, the working public as well as job-seekers and has become an important focus of recruitment for many employers. |
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What deity draws his bow for such a cowardice of curs as run your streets? |
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The band draws on Balkan repertoire but adds a few Breton tunes. |
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Lawrence Rhodes, director of the Juilliard School's Dance Division, draws a parallel between the teaching of choreography and the teaching of dance. |
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I grew up on the streets of Pittsburgh and I learned to treat everybody with respect because if not, one day that might be the guy who draws a gun on you and blows you away. |
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Eventually, as evening draws in, you turn a bend and catch a first glimpse of the scattering of bungalows, country houses and offices rising unannounced out of the deodars. |
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Vladimir Putin draws on his background as a master spy, testing and teasing the new regime in Kiev and its backers in Washington. |
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The main public entrance on the east side is signposted by a huge canopy that draws visitors into a long, vaulted undercroft containing an exhibition space, cafe and shop. |
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Even the women's Nationals had only nine players and the men's draws for this event and the team selection tourneys have been disappointingly small as well. |
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Decisions will have to be made in relation to the various championship formats, and then of course there will be the championship draws to spice up the occasion. |
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Her work is imbued with a keen sense of the macabre and the wittily surreal and draws heavily on symbolism and themes derived from traditional fairy tales and folk myths. |
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Into this mix Brooks introduces two young catalysts, journalist Eve, who immediately draws Dan's attentions, and easygoing Gord, who sets his cap for Gena. |
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Sitting relaxed in a blazer and untucked shirt, he talked about what draws him to such combustible roles. |
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The band is loose but swings, the production is appropriately rough and leaking like a sieve, and the song selection draws from Burnside favorites. |
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The most important aspect of this study may be that it draws attention to repeated violence committed by male adolescents in relatively advantaged neighborhoods. |
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When your attention flags, a switch in tense or change of narrative pace, an amusing anecdote or a crisp scientific explanation draws you in again. |
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As always, he draws indelible portraits of gangsters and lowlifes. |
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A major branch of study within archaeology that draws on archaeological, historical geography, human geography, ecology, anthropology, and place-name studies. |
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A recent study published in New Scientist magazine draws a direct link between sulfurous fumes from US smokestacks and 30 years of drought in Africa. |
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If a part of the screen needs updating, the application simply draws over the top of it and outputs that new image to the graphics card for display on the screen. |
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They are also likely to stoke the kind of sectarian mistrust from which ISIS draws its strength. |
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Beginners usually start with a regulated model with a circuit board that prevents draws longer than 10 seconds. |
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Also in many countries of continental Europe and most other civil law countries the law draws a distinction between private law proceedings and criminal proceedings. |
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In the midst of this fabulous display the patron and other gentlemen examine a portfolio while a young art student draws from the assembled works. |
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With urgency and empathy, Above the East China Sea draws the reader into these two competing and vastly different worlds. |
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Using a straight edge and black marker, Irvan draws a square. |
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As the process of globalization draws us ever closer in networks of communication and exchange, there is an understandable longing for simplicity, clarity and certainty. |
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The building draws back from the end of the site to form a parvis planted with trees, which will hopefully become a well-used and cared-for public space. |
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I know that spinning a physical disk draws a lot more charge out of a NiCad or Alkaline cell than just pushing electrons around inside a semiconductor chip. |
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And now as August draws to a close, many of us are wondering whether there will be enough warm days left to mature the corn that is just barely tasseling. |
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Extra greyhound meetings and numbers draws in British betting offices. |
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An art object that draws the viewer's attention to these realities, and leaves no room for ambiguity in their identification, can be an assaultive and disturbing experience. |
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Kelly draws up a large, impressive, even diverse, cast of Irish cops and gunrunners, Italian mobsters and mistresses, Russian immigrants and killers, saints and scoundrels. |
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Hailed by many as one of the finest songwriters ever to emerge from Ireland, he draws from many influences including folk, trad, rock, country and blues. |
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The Mag-Lite LMSA201 lamp draws about 150 milliamps at 3 volts. |
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The beautiful finish in the idols of Ram, Lakshman, Sita and Hanuman and Lord Siva and Goddess Parvathi made of gunmetal draws the attention of connoisseurs. |
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The popular talk show host draws ratings, crowds, and is a motivator. |
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What is of interest is Chanel herself, and on the subject Vaughan draws a brilliant portrait. |
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As the testing draws to a close and the director calls a wrap on the shoot, I realise the Ferrari 355 Spyder hasn't been part of the proceedings at all. |
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A scheme that draws young tearaways back on to the straight and narrow with a taste of military discipline is to be expanded nationwide, it was announced yesterday. |
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In his third production of the play, Hall draws out that dreamlike quality with mesmerising force, shunning stunt casting or tricks for a beautifully clear production. |
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