Novelty of a dissertational work and its theme should be closely connected. |
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From 1917 to 1919 he was a drummer and xylophonist with Earl Fuller's Rector Novelty Orchestra and recorded and performed on Broadway. |
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Not the fried chicken and waffles from Jones or the bittersweet chocolate semifreddo from Novelty? |
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His latest hardcover, a redolent bouquet called The Acme Novelty Date Book, may be his most threatening. |
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Novelty records, for the most part, are usually heartbreak at every turn, with a short shelf life to boot. |
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Novelty by its nature is a limited sentiment and Inverness must already regard their new environment with wearisome sufferance. |
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Novelty bands are ten a penny, as even the most cursory glance at the charts on either side of the Atlantic will show you. |
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Novelty events come and go and are of limited appeal but a good musical act covers a multitude and keeps the crowd happy. |
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Novelty playing cards showing Canvey's artistic welcome sign have been printed to raise cash to help regeneration work. |
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Novelty colours available are lime green and a dark red seemingly black. |
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Novelty aside, the real question is whether these avowedly chaste men of the cloth are listening. |
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From the best white soda to queen cakes and treacle cake, one of the prizes that will surely water the taste buds of visitors will be the prize for the Best Novelty Cake. |
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Novelty is not synonymous with depth and profundity of insight. |
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Novelty was tried again the following day, was withdrawn after a joint failed again, and Rocket was declared the winner. |
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Thus, the Jimi Hendrix Experience performed their very first show on October 13, 1966, at the Novelty in Evreux. |
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In 1829 he assisted John Braithwaite and John Ericsson with the Novelty at the Rainhill Trials. |
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McCutcheon's Stocks of Ginghams, Linens, Shirtings, Novelty Voiles, Zephyrette, Japanese Crepes, and White materials are always abundant and varied. |
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It is surprising to see how a young man, if he catches an idea which has any novelty, will write away on it and tell you wonders. |
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Young people, as a rule, prefer novelty to conventions, breaking fresh ground to following the beaten track. |
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Emotions are also more vulnerable to manipulation by marketers, since they are attuned to respond to novelty, and visual stimulus. |
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Rather than set out to offer an alternative to novelty acts, it cashes in on cheap tongue-in-cheek tack. |
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Even after the novelty wore off, about a third of the children eating lunch, along with teachers and others, continued to choose the salad bar. |
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While singing with lovely tone, her ragged entries and distracting blocking added humour but lost novelty quickly. |
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It is annoying when a guy with a novelty helmet thinks he has the sand to run a million dollar organization. |
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It was such a novelty that we would even stare at the test pattern together. |
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Natalia plays these novelty instruments, including Austrian cowbells, the theremin, the toy piano and the musical saw. |
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The novelty of them has worn off and no team will again head north with the complacent attitude of an easy win and a night in Edinburgh. |
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The novelty of playing with clock applets, weather widgets, stock tickers and dancing hula girls soon wears off. |
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Cheap tracts and single sheet broadsides fed an apparently insatiable popular appetite for novelty, sensation and titillation. |
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Or it may have thought about adding wings and a novelty moulded roof in the shape of Barney the Dinosaur. |
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The novelty in this game, compared to Canasta, is the fact that you can build sequences. |
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According to Richard Smith, sales manager and store manager, people want metallics with texture and novelty. |
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Such varied images of what might transpire at a meeting suggests the novelty of the institution itself. |
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Edinburgh's a binary system, but other than that novelty, it looks fairly uninteresting at first glance. |
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Now the novelty has worn off and the economy has gone down the tubes, but the artists are still coming. |
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If mongrel species represent genetic novelty and are stabilizing components of their ecosystems, are they not worth saving? |
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Many people here might consider taking a winter break in Turkey, but the idea of a Turkish family coming to Scotland in winter is a novelty. |
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Many a manager agrees that voices lose novelty and impact, their ideas age, their approach can become monotonous. |
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It was a novelty to not have a front seat, but the car had lost all of its umph. |
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These kinds of students need plenty of physical movement and novelty, said Golay. |
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Before I pressed play, I wanted more sound, layer upon layer to slake my thirst for novelty. |
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Like television he is over-excitable, bonhomous, hungry for novelty, permanently racing against the clock. |
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We are often told that establishment taste is parochial, obtuse and unreceptive to novelty. |
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The boxty was a novelty food for our French friends and they all expressed satisfaction with its texture and flavour. |
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The first couple of days I think it was a bit of a novelty factor for the other clients here at the Centre, but now I'm just one of the boys. |
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It's bubbling with quirky grunge, liberally sprinkled with novelty hip-hop, soul and ska. |
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I have a soft spot for novelty acts, so this place rates high on my list of Montreal must-eats. |
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We throw away stuff not because it's outlived its usefulness or functionality but its novelty. |
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There is a growing regard for the novelty and breadth of purposes for neuroimaging. |
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It has novelty value but that will soon wear off once the menu options are exhausted. |
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More within the reach of the novice collector are the myriad of smaller novelty pieces, from the cameo brooch to the charm bracelet. |
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Although nonsense words lose their novelty very quickly, when first presented they often provoke interest, curiosity, and even some amusement. |
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Like Chris, they enjoy the novelty of having a hobby that is not mainstream. |
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History shows that my novelty value tends to wear off within about two minutes. |
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Here is a brief quote from a much larger section of the book concerned with novelty and different paradigms of information-presentation. |
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After the initial novelty wears off, the bonus rounds become quite predictable. |
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The novelty of the quality improvement approach was welcomed by patients and staff as a way to change the system. |
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Beyond its chronological breadth and the relative novelty of its subject, this book has much to recommend it. |
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Regardless, the VP was certainly excited by the sheer novelty of the experience. |
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The cool temperatures and dampness of the cave doomed it to failure though and the novelty eventually wore off. |
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Distributing 7,500 garbage pails around Central Park with a teddy bear atop each might be as creative, if creativity is measured by novelty. |
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In the current rush for novelty and innovation, an artist such as Arikha is easily bypassed as old-fashioned or backward-looking, an anomaly. |
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Tom said he started bringing a book to work to pass the time after the initial novelty wore off. |
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Perhaps many people are seduced by the sheer novelty or comedy of my appearance. |
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But creativity means appearance of novelty, which by definition exists outside the confines of a deterministic universe. |
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Intel servers are a relative novelty at IBM, which until the late 1990s favoured its higher-end server families. |
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One of the most fundamental problems in modern evolutionary biology is the origin of morphological novelty. |
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The Jerusalem artichoke at first had an enthusiastic reception in Europe, where its curious, sweet taste was a novelty. |
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My companion had never eaten sushi before and found the whole experience a novelty. |
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She designed a novelty cake using a scene from the Lord of the Rings film based on the novel of the same name by J.R. Tolkien for inspiration. |
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Included are figure dancing, solo dancing, recitations, music and novelty acts. |
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A plate rack held a variety of novelty teapots and a selection of mobiles occupied one corner of the room. |
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His Uncle Milton Ant Farm rocked the novelty world when it was launched in 1956, and since then more than 20 million units have sold. |
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Both reports had treated the group and the response of its fans as a mildly amusing novelty item. |
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The shift is designed to improve margins on the company's novelty products. |
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Did you feel embarrassed eating an ice cream novelty shaped like a cartoon character? |
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Firefighters are warning of the dangers of children mistaking novelty lighters for toys. |
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This year, he's already signed on to design a sports beverage novelty product called Baby Bailers, which is being manufactured in Hong Kong. |
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And after a while, after the novelty has worn off and the newness stales, this once secret entity becomes common, and reluctantly accepted. |
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But when faced with gigs, the novelty of solitude wore off and the solo version of the album became his calling card for potential players. |
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Some even viewed the charge of novelty as a calumny leveled at them by their contemporary enemies. |
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The nation's No.1 team was a national championship novelty, a one-hit wonder led by the quarterback with the funny name. |
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The ballroom dancers were out in style while there was also a novelty set dancing display. |
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But once the technological novelty was outgrown, something aesthetically interesting happened. |
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Though not altogether successful, it had the novelty value of being set in the eccentric subculture of stylists and hairdressing salons. |
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Collectible cross products also include its stylographic pens and all its early and novelty pencils. |
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Just two or three years ago, hotels that offered guests in-room high-speed Internet access were still somewhat of a novelty. |
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In his collection, poetic romance and realism, luxury and succinctness, conservatism and novelty are combined in a perfect way. |
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Though I refrain from overprizing originality, I cannot help valuing novelty at its full worth. |
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But this can be a positive as you will be a novelty and it may catch the eye of a chica prepared to show you some moves! |
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That first year there was a Sunday afternoon parade, two band performances, some novelty events and a home-grown drumming band. |
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We rarely stop the ice cream truck because we buy Good Humor assorted novelty ice cream in bulk at Costco. |
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There was a special companion dog show as well as sections for pedigree dogs and novelty categories. |
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I've always found going clubbing mildly ridiculous, which probably added to the novelty of last night's outing. |
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These included tea-lights, night-lights, perfumed candles, novelty candles, oil burners and other candleholders. |
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The human desire for novelty is twinned with an equally imperative desire for continuity. |
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In the years since, the record's become a collector's item among comic strip fanatics and devotees of novelty music. |
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Passengers told how they used mobile phones and novelty glowsticks as impromptu torches to guide them to safety. |
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The Baroness and her friends worshipped novelty, inappropriateness, audacity, not piously but with ferocious abandon. |
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We'll get heartily sick of these two issues over the next three months but, for now, both introduce wonderful novelty to the political contest. |
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Cigar piercers are the kind of small lethal object no longer allowed in hand luggage, cutters were often made in novelty shapes. |
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How long before the novelty wears off, and that kitten ends up another feral cat? |
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This film is like a three-minute novelty record that has been turned into a triple-disc concept album. |
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Promotions will continue through the festival, at which 30,000 concert-goers will be given festival kits that include novelty themed tattoos. |
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There's no threshold to reach, event horizon to cross, or moment of novelty to await. |
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The Eighties were the decade of innovation and novelty in frozen and processed foods. |
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Who among us can possibly keep up with the insatiable thirst for novelty demanded and dominated by the toy industry? |
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Once the novelty of the costumed fighting has passed, the stories are rather forgettable. |
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Competitions will take place in solo singing, recitation, question time, instrumental music, ballad group singing, novelty act, ceilidh dancing. |
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Isn't Marx making a deliberately exaggerated statement of his own position in order to display its novelty? |
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This economy has, as its constitutive elements, such factors as attention span, pleasure, ratio of novelty to repetition. |
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In the production of many consumer goods, novelty in product design and appearance is now important. |
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As well as embodying novelty and enchantment, the architecture of the spa reflected these intimately connected functions. |
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Despite the latter's novelty pointe work and the excellence of Braque's designs this ballet was not a success. |
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The novelty of a daily fix of happy sun-tanned people was spiced up by the rumours that Kylie and Donovan were an item off screen as well as on. |
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However, since this mode was included in previous versions, it feels more like a postscript than a true addition or novelty. |
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But there are difficult questions to be asked as to how one might distinguish innovation from formal novelty. |
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In a dynamic and forward-looking Europe, there were new audiences for music and an appetite for novelty. |
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I used to go down there every Saturday morning for fresh bread and croissants, but it soon lost its novelty status. |
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Pack little surprises from time to time like stickers, a novelty pen or a joke. |
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Today, funnel cakes are a novelty, but the fried bread has its roots in Pennsylvania Dutch country. |
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Also worth looking out for are novelty chamber pots often made in the form of animals which were designed to potty-train small children. |
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Gene duplication is purported to be a major pathway for the Darwinian evolution of biochemical novelty. |
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Be wary of the 1.25-liter Darwin stubby, though it's really only bought as a novelty souvenir these days. |
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But then Harry, a glutton for novelty, will drink from any passing puddle or unusual container that comes his way. |
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Like many disciplines, history stays alive through novelty spins, Romantic History, psychohistory, the school of the annales and oral history. |
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The novelty was interesting, but puppy love and gentle caresses weren't usually her style. |
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I hop up to adjust the dimmer on the halogen lights, partly so we can absorb the honey glow and partly because of the novelty. |
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Most evangelicals will respond to this basic thesis with hesitation, if only because of its novelty. |
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Indeed, excluding those people who undertook air travel for its snob or novelty value, flying was only for quick errands or visits. |
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Spell-checkers are the worst invention since sausage dog-shaped draught excluders and novelty doorbells. |
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The real novelty was the stables tour to see the shire horses that pull the drays. |
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This pattern suggests an inherent love of novelty, or neophilia, which I documented in young ravens as an adaptation for finding new food. |
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To those who know him, he isn't a novelty act or a weakling who couldn't hack the rigours of the infantry. |
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You may attend a religious service once or twice, but the novelty soon wears off if you can't understand what's being said. |
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The novelty of living in a hotel suite and surrendering your personal privacy soon wears off. |
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Will I be able to retain this enthusiasm for the gym or will the novelty soon wear off? |
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For many the novelty of all that blood-soaked jibber-jabber wore thin pretty quickly. |
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She enjoyed the novelty of the catwalks and fashion shoots and loved the social whirl that went with it, using parties and functions to network. |
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Bookshops this Christmas are piled high with short novelty volumes knocked off by their authors in a couple of hours flat. |
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A hand shake is exciting by it's closeness and novelty, but hongi or a hug is a whole different level. |
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Macra has also put together a whole host of novelty competitions and farm skills displays, from sheaf tossing to round bale rolling. |
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In a society dominated by allegorical and historical painting, his scenes of contemporary life were regarded as a novelty. |
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Half a dozen might make a novelty set of drinks coasters, but a million amounts to about 17 tons of landfill. |
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At first, Rhino issued novelty recordings, but over time it began licensing and remastering recordings from other labels. |
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Left-handers seem to be more acutely sensitive and responsive to novelty than right handers. |
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For anyone east of the Rockies, this is how the fun little novelty on the left coast looks. |
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However, there comes a point when rudeness passes from novelty into annoyingness. |
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To the revisionists, the novelty of the 'new' police was neither efficiency nor integrity. |
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I've got a novelty mini-Beverly Hillbillies television set that lights up and plays the theme song when you push a button. |
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It's a light-hearted gift set for the complete Tarot beginner, or a novelty deck for the more experienced reader or collector. |
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It was an interesting novelty, but tasted more like an apple pie than a ballpark pretzel. |
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This suspicion of being enemy agents was, so far as literary men were concerned, no novelty. |
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But was there something deeper to roller disco than the novelty of dancing on skates? |
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This side of the eschaton the Spirit pours forth living waters, filled with novelty. |
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He hopes that adding a live music element to the locale will give his venue both novelty and staying power. |
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It's all very well roughing it in your twenties, but it tends to lose its novelty after a while. |
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Long ago, ice used to be a novelty, shipped across the world in massive chunks carved from frozen lakes and rivers. |
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It was a great novelty to pull a chain instead of having a long drop toilet. |
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Other events on the day include performing artists, novelty races, face painting, workshops, market stalls and music. |
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Not even the hawkiest neo-conservative is calling for war, a novelty in recent American history. |
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Will they come back again, or were they just buying a novelty item? |
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Add to this a UK music press obsessed with novelty in the post-punk era, and you've got a microwave recipe for compartmentalization via xenophile adoration. |
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These innovations made possible more playthings per child as well more variety and novelty in playthings, making children's products part of an emerging fashion industry. |
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But he's a sophomore and, what's more, sophomoric in thinking that this qualifies as a grand revolution instead of a thinly veiled stab at novelty. |
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The irony of English papers nibbling into the Scottish press is that it is happening at a time when Scotland is enjoying the novelty of having its own Parliament. |
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If the element of surprise wanes, there is no more novelty to report on. |
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That fact makes certain legal rules formally inapplicable, and the novelty of the situation creates a dilemma for both the government and for immigrants. |
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Probably the best time to visit is spring or autumn when the sharp nip in the air is still a welcome novelty and makes sight-seeing on foot more pleasant. |
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The broad consequence of an endless spotlight on novelty has, of course, been a corresponding neglect of individualistic but non-aligned art and artists. |
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I am therefore surprised to arrive at Hotel Galapagos on Santa Cruz, an hour or so later, to find one draped across my doorstep like a novelty draft excluder. |
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This explosion of linguistic novelty has sent linguists reeling, a bit. |
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In the 1950s, fondue became popular as an American party food, both for its novelty and its communal nature. |
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That's one reason we like novelty, including different cuts of jeans. |
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Actually, the novelty has long worn off and, like most of us hapless e-mailers, I too have to grin and bear it when I find my mailboxes clogged with junk mails. |
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They seemed to enjoy the novelty of not having lots of things to do. |
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The party-pooping rotters have now left local children in tears at the prospect of facing Christmas without their favourite novelty garden decoration. |
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She was a novelty item, presented in gaudy wrapping paper by a desperate John McCain to a jaded mainstream media. |
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When times are hard or not so, rummaging through other people's cast-offs and unwanted novelty kitchen items is a fine way to spend a Saturday afternoon. |
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But opinion is often shaped by a modern preference for novelty. |
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The flocking industry produces fleeced fabric and plush objects for use in the manufacture of upholstery, clothing, carpets, automobiles, and novelty items. |
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That dalliance with the truth about why sport actually exists spawned a little hybrid that would grow to take over the game, mostly because of its novelty. |
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The newest novelty item for sale in Tokyo generates a lot of pillow talk. |
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No way was he going to let them corner the market in novelty and wonder. |
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They mistook novelty for originality, creativity, and competence. |
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Truss's humorous tract on the rights and wrongs of punctuation now comes complete with a novelty pop-out repair kit of adhesive stickers for punctuation vigilantes. |
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The arrangements are full of interesting sounds like music box, berimbau and glockenspiel without ever over-egging the pudding or resorting to gratuitous novelty. |
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The fact that it was served in a gondola-shaped dish was inexplicable considering the restaurant's Bulgarian theme, but at least it added novelty value. |
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The novelty of this book is that it counterposes sociobiology to developmental biology rather than its traditional foe, anti-biological approaches to human sociality. |
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The press camping on my parents doorstep was a bit of a novelty for them. |
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The trend started innocuously a few years ago, when novelty cameras that plugged into mobile handsets were marketed to gadget-obsessed kids in Japan and Europe. |
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The novelty competition is a lighthearted short drama or comedy sketch. |
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Researchers have taken a serious look at the fun side of a dog's life and have discovered that most canines have a preference for novelty, a trait called neophilia. |
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Advertising values memorability and pattern recognition, and those things are pleasures, but difficulty and novelty and freshness are also pleasures. |
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And he did it consistently, not on a whim as a novelty or diversion. |
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While novelty ignites temporary enthusiasm on both sides of the footlights, the Washington Ballet's most urgent need would seem to be productions of proven old works. |
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A person's inherent need for sensation is not necessarily obvious in the early stages of a relationship, when love itself is a novelty and carries its own thrills. |
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Too much Affordably Good Design made me want to go straight to a novelty shop in Devizes to buy a toby jug of a grinning trawlerman's head sporting a yellow sou'wester. |
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Casual sexual experiences are not a novelty for either of them. |
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To art historians trained in the Warburgian tradition this method would seem as old as art history itself, but it was a novelty for the history of Dutch painting. |
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But novelty packaging couldn't disguise the fact that children and their minders were being asked to forgo the ease and speed of wheeled transport in favour of shoe leather. |
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I think the yellow hair and blue eyes were a real novelty for them. |
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I suspect he preferred the novelty of being a black man who sang like Elvis in mostly white honky-tonks to being a nearly blind visitor to the king of rock 'n' roll's court. |
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But it is also overcooked and frenetic, with some visual tricks and gimmicks repeated often enough to induce a diminishing return of novelty and effect. |
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It was a time when pressure cookers, gas cookers and food mixers were making kitchen tasks easier, but refrigerators were still something of a novelty. |
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The lawyers, often personal injury lawyers, are jolted out of their parasitic and banal existence by the novelty of an innocent and deserving client. |
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After years spent driving around London, screaming orgasmically when we spotted a vacant parking meter, it was a novelty to be able to stop where the heck you like. |
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And it's certainly worth a listen, as most novelty songs are. |
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Like the Hindu temples and the Sikh gurdwaras, the mosque as an architectural type, despite centuries of evolution, is a novelty in North America. |
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It also said that although the sales will come from services such as mobile phone graphics, icons, screen savers and novelty voice mail, it is ringtones that will dominate. |
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The nickelodeon was a new business, a novelty, something between a circus and a peep show. |
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Personal checks and automatic debits for monthly bills are a novelty. |
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The winner of the novelty cake was Michelle Flatley, Moyview. |
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Other environmental experts think the bluefin study might be more notable for its novelty, rather than its alarm. |
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Or maybe both cultures got off on a glorious combination of cliche and novelty, even if they disagreed on which was which. |
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While the only thing it's actually revolutionized so far is the novelty items industry, it does deserve some credit as an impressive work of technology. |
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Sales soared and while the cynics predicted that the bubble would burst as we moved on to the next novelty, the people mover, demand has steadily increased. |
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For many bloggers, the novelty soon wears off and their persistence fades. |
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We see a solitary figure in a darkened office, a lighted miniature Christmas tree sitting on someone's desk, and a dippy Christmas novelty song playing on the radio. |
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The audience adorn themselves in patriotic tat, such as Union Jack hats and novelty polyester ties, and sing songs about Britain's greatness whilst waving plastic flags. |
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During the war years, Auntie Flo always sent food in the Bundles for Britain from America and we had a tinned fruit cake, a much appreciated novelty. |
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These two present an informative and lively commentary that, frankly, doesn't need the random interpolations from Willis for any reason other than novelty value. |
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Ebay started in business by helping enthusiasts to swap novelty toys. |
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There are more sweet treats on offer from Gingernuts which sells novelty gingerbread. |
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The clipping of words is a harmless habit, used less for speed in spoken communication than for its sense of novelty or insiderness. |
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That explains the mass appeal of this new nightstand novelty, the Sense system. |
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Stuckists championed a return to art as a form of communication and expression rather than the nihilism and novelty of conceptual art. |
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When the cage outwore its novelty and was sent back to the warehouse, the company was going to discard it. |
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The huge vases and free-form candy dishes are always popular choices, but this year the novelty is fishbowls. |
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For them, novelty and naughtiness were the ultimate aphrodisiacs. |
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The sheer novelty of the factory and the equipment it contained accounted for some of its mesmerization. |
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The novelty of seeing a member of the Europhile Lib Dems seeming to oppose metrification has attracted the required attention. |
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To do that, consider stopping a buck by using natural attractions, whitetail nosiness, or a novelty. |
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This was followed by the novelty round shot over different distances, the winner Jim Hockaday who hit 29 targets. |
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Those who want to give their students a novelty exercise might be best served using stop motion animation. |
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Meanwhile James Cowie's business Gingernuts has started selling novelty gingerbread as well as handmade aprons and gifts. |
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Take men's novelty posing pouches, for instance, which litter the high street shelves at this time of year. |
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Inspector Gadget is a bionic crime-fighter who's part Erector Set, part novelty store inventory, part Matthew Broderick. |
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In addition to infantry and cavalry, the Britons employed chariots, a novelty to the Romans, in warfare. |
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Gould's career was brief, but his success was not a novelty of subliterary misogyny. |
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Hers was a metempsychosis of novelty, her mind a vapid thing until animated by the next absolute conviction. |
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Blackamoor servants were seen as a fashionable novelty and popular in the homes of the wealthy. |
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Occasionally, clocks whose hands revolve counterclockwise are nowadays sold as a novelty. |
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Deer antlers are also used for decorative purposes and have been used for artwork, furniture and other novelty items. |
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Because of the novelty of the expedition, some of the equipment was invented or specially modified for the occasion. |
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Of course, there's a tendency to dismiss Buck and the Boys, pornobilly as a cheap novelty. |
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The novelty awoke the interest of the people of Pernambuco, that soon adhered to the game. |
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Soon the novelty of all-talking pictures wore off and incidental music began to make a comeback. It was, after all, an added production value. |
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Their light was used to light up the National Gallery in London and was a great novelty at the time. |
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Other common types of literary forgery may draw upon the potential historical cachet and novelty of a previously undiscovered author. |
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The Norman Conquest...brought with it the novelty of family nomenclature, that is to say, the use of hereditary surnames. |
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The Surrey must be looked upon as the spring novelty in the way of road-wagons. |
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Back in the 1950s achimenes, also known as 'hot water plants', were popular house plants, not least because of their novelty value. |
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Charabancs, although a novelty, were not the most comfortable way of getting around. |
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These judges reviewed the applications received and evaluated nominated products for flexibility, potential, novelty and vendibility. |
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The appeal of Bitcoin lies in part in its novelty and techy-ness. |
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Records are a novelty for the former and a source of Proustian delight for the latter. |
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Marmite maker Unilever has teamed up with novelty chocolate firm Kinnerton to launch the Easter eggs next month. |
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I love the cheesiness and novelty factor of it all, just sitting around at home getting fat, drunk and watching old telly. |
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Accepting the overlordship of the king of the English was no novelty, as previous kings had done so without result. |
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AsiaOs top 5 infinity pools There was once a time when infinity pools were a novelty. |
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At this time musical recording was still very much a novelty. |
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The novelty would show in the literature of sceptical inquiry, and the Gallicism would show in the introduction of Neoclassicism into English writing and criticism. |
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Godinger has taken novelty to the next level in the barware category, creating such items as the Slot Machine liquor dispenser and the Firetruck barware set. |
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The persistence of the Past is one of those tragicomic blessings which each new age denies, coming cocksure on to the stage to mouth its claim to a perfect novelty. |
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This exception to the doctrine of implied repeal was something of a novelty, though the court stated that it remained open for Parliament to expressly repeal the Act. |
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The universal appeal and instant recognition of bank notes has resulted in a plethora of novelty merchandise that is designed to have the appearance of paper currency. |
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Reconciling profound enquiry with clearness, and truth with novelty. |
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The best known name in this field is Alfred Dunhill, their novelty lighters, in the shape of tinder pistols and hunting horns, for instance, being quite sought after. |
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The organizers are stopping at nothing to present a truly authentic experience for those who follow sumo and those merely attracted by the novelty of this unique event. |
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Every good journalist knows that for a story to be newsworthy it should be interesting, unusual, with an element of novelty and proximity, and above all worth reading. |
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Keshavan, like Tonga's Bruno Banani, became something of a fans' favourite in Sochi, not least because of the novelty of seeing an Indian racing down a luge track. |
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They introduced a novelty in the nautical cartography for they are geographical maps, all with common stylistic representation of certain accidents and geographical areas. |
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And with various other novelty and fancy dress shops selling the masks around the North East, a sizeable contingent of Spidermen are expected to arrive at the ground tonight. |
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Finding a barred owl in the 1980s was considered a novelty, says Kelso. |
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