The album received poor reviews and left many critics asking if pop's most successful chameleon had lost her touch. |
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We all understand the ability of the chameleon to change its colours to suit its environment. |
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Particularly well known for her Rossini, the consummate singer-actress changes like a chameleon to adapt to the requirements of the repertoire. |
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Not only that, but what we want, and who we are, is as fluid and changeable as a chameleon. |
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A social chameleon and born survivor, Sneath is there as events unfold and is around to tell the story later. |
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The final cause of the process is that the chameleon should escape detection by its predators. |
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After all, she's known for being a chameleon by using both fashion and beauty to transmogrify into totally different looks each time we see her. |
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It is as if to survive, it has had to change names, like a chameleon changing colours. |
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Chameleons such as this male Parson's chameleon from Madagascar change their skin color to hide and to communicate. |
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The chameleon has the ability to bring long life or death, fecundity or barrenness, depending on its color. |
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It lacked the light brown fur, however, and instead owned a soft, fleshy skin with the abilities of a chameleon. |
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But if you are a chameleon, you can sneak in and move ahead with the furtiveness required in one-day cricket. |
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The chameleon is sometimes green, sometimes blue, it is all colours by turn, and sometimes it is absolutely colourless. |
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He has, after all, always been a bit of an actor, with his chameleon persona and a voice that sometimes has a chummy, mockney tone. |
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Dissection of chameleon tongues revealed an elastic collagen tissue sandwiched between the tongue bone and the accelerator muscle. |
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This is similar in ways to the chameleon, a lizard which can alter the colour of its skin. |
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This is a man without a shred of integrity, a man who will change his colours like a chameleon to suit the situation. |
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His workmanlike versatility and steady output have earned him a reputation as an artistic chameleon. |
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A chameleon was shifting to match the kaleidoscope of colour given off by the lights of a gramophone record store. |
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Only a few visits to your doctor will be enough to implant you with chameleon genes and you've got thought controlled cosmetics. |
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The political chameleon changes its colors according to pressure, not conscience. |
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On his fifth album, Harper plays the role of musical chameleon, shifting and defying musical categorization. |
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It was impossible not to like this energetic chameleon, this part salesman, part bit actor, and part seducer. |
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Never transforming his image significantly, yet constantly changing roles like a chameleon. |
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Listeners seemed divided over whether Skaggs or musical chameleon Elvis Costello stole Thursday's show. |
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She alone was capable of the amazing things she mastered like a vocal chameleon. |
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To party cynics, she may be seen as a political chameleon, reinventing herself to charm the voters. |
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The real surprise would be if the post-modern chameleon made two albums in a row that sounded alike. |
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The most brilliant move by the director was the casting of artistic chameleon and rock-and-roll space oddity David Bowie. |
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Bowie remains the quintessential song-and-dance man, effortlessly charming and elegant, and as ever, a shameless karma chameleon. |
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In the pure-cone American chameleon retina, all visual opsins including rod opsin are expressed. |
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Before she was a fabulous comedy chameleon, Tracey Ullman was a teen dancer touring with a gaggle of chorus boys. |
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They have been replaced by the corresponding segments of the pigment of American chameleon. |
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Contrary to popular belief, the American chameleon does not assume the color of its surroundings. |
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Look at an actor who never ceases to amaze in his breathe of characters and you'll know she is not the only fashion chameleon around. |
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The strange thing about abusers is that they're like some kind of social chameleon. |
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You have to be an everyman and chameleon, so that every bit of you is involved in the end. |
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He was a brilliant careerist and opportunist, a political chameleon whose life story seems more the stuff of fiction than of any kind of conventional history. |
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When the chameleon spots its prey, it does not leap on it, but it uses its tongue. |
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He really is a constant chameleon, moving house, changing his social circle and even his hobbies between albums. |
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The American chameleon, or anole, is not a true chameleon, but a small lizard of the iguana family, found in the SE United States and noted for its color changes. |
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First and foremost is Mike Myers, who is known as a vocal chameleon. |
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As he showed yesterday, he is above all a brilliant political chameleon. |
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While he could be a chameleon on the international stage, he was never a man of dialogue on the domestic front. |
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He is also a chameleon, he says, able to adapt his personality to appease any audience. |
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Far from a crude warlord, he was a chameleon, equally comfortable as a preacher or a warrior. |
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The eye sockets often contain some blue scales, which differentiate this pigmy chameleon from most other species. |
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The same blogosphere that helped his meteoric rise may one day pay more attention to his chameleon qualities. |
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In the collective imagination, the chameleon is known for its ability to change color depending on its environment. |
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The common chameleon, geckos and more than thirty lizards, small and large, are also found on the peninsular. |
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One finds some various colours: black, bluish and even in chameleon, i.e. when the weapon is turned the colour changes. |
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Georges, a regular visitor notes the rarity of the chameleon near the banks. |
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This should serve as a singular lesson to the chameleon political class: deliver what you promised or get booted out of power. |
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A chameleon can change its body colour, usually in response to its mood. |
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You know, the wily old chameleon could still come out ahead. |
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Growing up in Kenya, my brother and I often shared the branches with a chameleon as we reached for the juicy, yellow loquats, keeping our eyes open for snakes. |
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They change color like the chameleon, and they return like a boomerang. |
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In the evening the Mekong always seemed to come alive, changing its colour like a chameleon, camouflaging itself against the darkening sky until it swallowed the sun. |
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Their eyes move independently of each other, like those of a chameleon, and their bodies are covered by bony plates, similar to those of seahorses. |
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Everyone in Canada will now have the uncanny ability of the chameleon. |
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I'm a Piscean, who admits to being a complete social chameleon, and I would be completely over-whelmed and swamped by the personalities of others. |
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He has always guarded his private life fiercely, arguing that talking about his off-screen relationships cheapens them and hampers his professional ability to be a chameleon. |
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She can switch roles as quick as a chameleon but this one was something that needed a little more than a deft flick of the wrist and a witty turn of phrase. |
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The wide renown of Puvis, a chameleon of a painter, meant that his relatively anodyne pastorals could be championed by just about anybody for just about any purpose. |
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Toronto Zoo gave their chameleon to Sofia Zoo as a sign of gratitude for the female hippopotamus sent to impregnate a Toronto Zoo hippopotamus last year. |
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And honestly... apart from a chameleon or a cuttlefish, who likes change? |
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More than likely to be a plant called houttuynia chameleon, one of the most adaptable plants around. |
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Dwarf chameleons, the chameleon of study, occupy a wide variety of habitats from forests to grasslands to shrubbery. |
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Other popular species are the colubrid snake, veiled chameleon and crested gecko. |
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Each young chameleon is born within the sticky transparent membrane of its yolk sac. |
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The chameleon tongue apparatus consists of highly modified hyoid bones, tongue muscles, and collagenous elements. |
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Each eye can pivot and focus independently, allowing the chameleon to observe two different objects simultaneously. |
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These spikes help break up the definitive outline of the chameleon, which aids it when trying to blend into a background. |
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And they found bear claws, 400 live tortoises, a chameleon in a handbag and scorpions in postal packages. |
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Offenders include chameleon plant, lamb's ear, lily-of the-valley and goutweed. |
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Maybe they are going to change their name again or change their colours, like some kind of a chameleon that fits into the Canadian landscape and changes colour depending upon what the mood is. |
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Mr Anwar, a political chameleon whose real beliefs are sometimes hard to pin down, has many critics, but he could at least credibly lead a coalition that bridges Malaysia's ethnic divides. |
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The reptiles species include skinks, legless lizards, and one species of chameleon, Chamaeleo monachus. |
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Some chameleon species communicate with one another by vibrating the substrate that they are standing on, such as a tree branch or leaf. |
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Chameleons generally eat insects, but larger species, such as the common chameleon, may also take other lizards and young birds. |
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The membrane bursts and the newly hatched chameleon frees itself and climbs away to hunt for itself and hide from predators. |
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Signal efficacy, or how well the signal can be seen against its background, has been shown to correlate directly to spectral qualities of chameleon displays. |
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Although nearly half of all chameleon species today live in Madagascar, this offers no basis for speculation that chameleons might originate from there. |
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Some chameleon species are able to change their skin coloration. |
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Google's animated Earth Day 2014 doodle feature creatures like Moon jellyfish, puffer fish, dung beetle, veiled chameleon, Japanese macaque, and the rufous hummingbird. |
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Come see a live alligator, panther, chameleon, gray fox, coatimundi. |
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