Why it is so important to localise and identify a given sound can be illustrated by a simple anecdote. |
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Her novels are people-centred, using anecdote and badinage, and she was early inspired by E. Welty. |
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There is satire, particularly in the rather tedious Book II, but there is also all the wit, anecdote and engaging thought of good conversation. |
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Though it is an amusing anecdote, this detail touches on a small but potentially crucial peculiarity in the current international emergency. |
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To the critics of his approach, Mr Kennedy is in the habit of retelling an involved Scottish anecdote about a whale getting itself beached. |
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I remember my predecessor telling a wonderfully self-deprecating anecdote of his initial activities as a theatrical angel. |
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Hearsay, anecdote and tall tales says that it is possible, that this is just words until it happens to you. |
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Although he has a terrible memory for most things, Barry can always remember a gag or anecdote. |
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She is a master of exposition and description, with a ready ear for a telling anecdote. |
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The distance between an amusing anecdote and thing that happened can be measured in kilometres. |
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One telling anecdote earlier this year had watchdog watchers aghast and amazed. |
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Knowledge rhetorically induced from a representative anecdote will ironically contain both of Ransom's two knowledges. |
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He included an anecdote about a water main breaking at the track and how he rushed out of his office, then paused to wonder what to do. |
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Gradually but surely, that tiresome old anecdote has sapped my strength, undermined my constitution, withered my life. |
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One anecdote from last week neatly sums up Labour's uncertainty over how to deal with the new Tory leader. |
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The mere prospect of having to recount a personal anecdote plunges me into boredom verging on catalepsy. |
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Whether this anecdote has any formal authenticity or not is a different question. |
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Only anecdote, but I asked around recently and most women I know prefer the dadbod to muscled bodies. |
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In your article in the May issue, you have an anecdote about a three-year-old boy who was saved because he was wearing a life jacket. |
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This isn't the most flattering anecdote, but the behaviour is in character. |
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Whether the incident happened at all, or as relayed in the anecdote, it is a slender confection to link this to the party's victory. |
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The only way in which I can recuperate my humiliation is to turn it into an amusing anecdote that elicits laughter or sympathy. |
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Let me point to one recent anecdote that to me suggests such overreaching is possible. |
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Allow me to give you a short anecdote, to vary the wearisomeness of my discourse. |
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The anecdote reached a peak of popularity at the end of the century, partly as a result of the influence of Boswell as a retailer of anecdotes. |
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Men will compete for the most supreme anecdote, joke, incident, or put down. |
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A few galvanic images free themselves from the fog of anecdote by their sheer authority. |
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Each anecdote seems designed to remind us we are in the presence of a clever and important man. |
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If a speaker does use humor in a speech, make certain the story, anecdote or joke is surefire funny with all listeners. |
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By way of digression and as an aside, here's a little anecdote from education. |
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Relying on argument or anecdote for their appeal, these books included only a handful of indifferently reproduced black-and-white plates. |
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Lacking a clear or coherent argument, the book also lacks anything in the way of vivid anecdote. |
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In the introduction, Fergusson begins with a striking anecdote that reveals how highly Brown was esteemed by his fellow poets. |
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Bill is never a paragraph away from an anecdote, and everything he says is rooted in experience and fact. |
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And drat the luck, the search got just odd enough to tip the anecdote to column status, but not great column status. |
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His flow of talk, of analysis and anecdote is magical and unstoppable. |
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She suggests, more importantly, that public figures like Jonathan Clarke become more comprehensible when connected to domestic and personal memoir and anecdote. |
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A further anecdote describes the time one of his tutors, a junior research fellow named Patrick Sandars, gave the class some problems from a book. |
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I countered my friend's well-intentioned censure with an anecdote. |
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Whereas the largest are fairly well researched, knowledge of the fisher, wolverine, river otter, mink, lynx, bobcat, and raccoon is almost entirely from anecdote. |
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An interesting anecdote has also been spun into the wonder liquid. |
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Even Ann Romney, in describing why she's smitten with her husband, offered no telling anecdote that might stick in people's minds. |
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Fernando Pereira emailed an anecdote about intensive use of eh. |
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To illustrate, she had some anecdote about herself and my mother, who had both been crazy about the opera and hung about the stage door in the hope of meeting the artists. |
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I've made enough speeches to know that you're supposed to connect with the audience by telling a joke or a humorous anecdote or some amusing tale. |
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This is staged documentary, its narrative gleaned from personal statements, in essence, a theatre of personal anecdote, performance art on an operatic scale. |
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Bennett's memoir is full of crucial technical insights into Broadway and Hollywood practice, but by way of instructive anecdote rather than structured discussion. |
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The appeal of Resnick's account is enhanced by the lure of Bohemia, which he and Passlof enrich with anecdote and intertwine with aesthetics and social history. |
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The novel is packed with incident and anecdote and although mainly realist in style borrows some of the familiar techniques of Garcia Marquez's magic realism. |
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His vision of the landscape was subjected to dreamy sentimentalism and romantic anecdote, rather than being acknowledged for its experimentalism and social content. |
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A pupil of Domenichino, he was most in sympathy with classical art, but he also appreciated the Baroque, and enriched his narratives with anecdote and vivid detail. |
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He was a huge fan of Dutch art, stuffed with incident and anecdote. |
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Now, however, we can appreciate the subtlety and unexpectedness of his framing, and the complex interplay he so often achieves between anecdote and form. |
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In art, the lure of anecdote always presents serious risks, and a good deal of nineteenth century American art succumbed to that drive to explain and amuse. |
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The anecdote is a perfect parable for the power and ignorance of artistic patrons. |
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In the same interview, he told an anecdote about what it means to be a good salesman. |
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One visitor, an elderly woman named Mrs. Lacey, relays an anecdote about her American son-in-law. |
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A third post by Davis then took apart an anecdote Tyson told about George W. Bush, showing it to be false. |
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There is an anecdote in the most recent book about the Bush White House which neatly captures how Europeans misjudge the President, and why they are wrong to do so. |
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Each will have a special anecdote of their friend Michael and his memory will long be cherished by all who were indeed fortunate to make his acquaintance. |
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If, as he claims, 20 per cent of council staff are lazy or past their sell-by date, then he must provide not just the odd anecdote but statistical evidence. |
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It was a testament to the public's thirst for trivia and anecdote. |
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On the Web site, in the e-mails of targeted professors, one finds a whole fuzzy world of impression and anecdote, of passionate conviction and hurt feelings. |
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She recalled an anecdote her husband told about their military school days, when Headley would avoid morning prayers. |
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Print and online publications are ginned up to shine an anecdote, an experience, into a gem that will be plucked and dittoed through the social media. |
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Before we get off the phone, Kent stumbles and stammers until finding her footing in a heartwarming anecdote. |
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We have a family anecdote about either me or my brother sledging over the edge of the car park and down into the path of the traffic on the main road below. |
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The gentry at the high table are sober and attentive as they listen, wine-glasses suspended, to a probably demure anecdote told by one of their number. |
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The very same magazine now prints sheafs of articles depicting the Earth as an overheating greenhouse, like this anecdote from the September 6, 2004 Newsweek. |
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One can think of very few biographers who have the ability to deal with critical assessment of such diversity and unwieldy fusions of anecdote and myth. |
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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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The feline anecdote was just one of a number of insights so perspicacious they subsequently acted as threads throughout the rest of the conference. |
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The retailer of the anecdote intends it to impart a message, the success of which depends on the degree to which the hearer regards the anecdote as factual. |
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The moralizing is given all the force which an accomplished rhetorician can provide and is enlivened by anecdote, hyperbole, and vigorous denunciation. |
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She became a globalist early on in her life, a moment that is crystallized in the incredible anecdote that begins her book. |
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Finally, on Monday, the internet was aflame with outrage over an extremely telling anecdote from a single Walmart store. |
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Now, I suspect that most of us read this anecdote with a somewhat bemused attitude at the daring of the vicar for having asked something so time-consuming of his bishop. |
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He recounted an anecdote about an elderly council tenant who was left without any gas heating for three days after her supply was cut off in error. |
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He was adept at deflecting a direct question with an anecdote or a bromide presented as a confidence. |
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Within less than 200 pages he tells a coherent tale including both pertinent detail and amusing anecdote covering the period from Neanderthal prehumans to the present. |
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The book includes an anonymous anecdote about Cameron, now referred to as Piggate. |
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Caesar uses this anecdote to illustrate the courage and bravery of his soldiers. |
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In a telling anecdote, he relates introducing a northern nephew to a small-town South Carolinian. |
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That anecdote is blown out into a full-blown love story plot in the film. |
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But as a great mentor once told me, the plural of anecdote is not data. |
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She then related an anecdote involving industrial glue and pelvic burns. |
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In honoured tradition, throw in the odd dirty joke or embarrassing anecdote. |
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No historical anecdote had ever brought home to Fiben so well just how much agnosy and craziness poor human mels and fems had endured. |
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It is true that part of Epiphanius's impetus in recounting this anecdote is to heroize orthodoxy. |
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I created Teatro hoping to establish a conversional anecdote targeting the cultural and intellectual ascent in the aspects of philosophy, art and literature. |
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There is an anecdote that the Box Tunnel may have been deliberately aligned so that the rising sun shines all the way through it on Brunel's birthday. |
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When my mum picked me up after school I'd always start telling her some childish anecdote about playing conkers, scrumping apples or sniffing marker pens. |
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Archaeologist John Creighton believes that this anecdote was a legend, and that Commius was sent to Britain as a friendly king as part of his truce with Mark Antony. |
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He held a tray but did not move from where he stood and managed, without any trace of emotion, to outstare Henry, who was standing in a group, half-listening to an anecdote. |
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An anecdote from the period recalls that his master, an illiterate and extremely frugal man, forbade Evans the use of candles to illuminate his reading in the evenings. |
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The purpose of the anecdote is to show the bold recklessness of the warrior, who could amuse himself with his song-craft in the very face of the enemy. |
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I remember an anecdote of a well-known French theorist, who was debating a point eagerly in his cenacle. It was objected against him that he had never experienced love. |
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