My sense of smell suddenly and disconcertingly became acute during the early stages of my second pregnancy and hasn't diminished since. |
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In various passages from her autobiography, Hepburn, the daughter of a suffragist and birth-control crusader, sounds disconcertingly unliberated. |
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It's been a week and he still regards me with that disconcertingly haunted stare. |
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North west of Oristano at Santa Cristina, disconcertingly close to the superstrada, are reminders of Sardinian life 3,500 years ago. |
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Reading his book over a century later, in an age that has sentimentalised illness and therapy, his remarks sound disconcertingly moderate. |
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It's disconcertingly riddled with inconsistent spellings, clunky syntax and other editing botches. |
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My first impression that there was something disconcertingly spartan about the room was reinforced after a bit of tortured thought. |
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And most disconcertingly, exposure to television, these days, is transfiguring into exposure to visuals of violence. |
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He picks it up and with a disconcertingly theatrical flourish, crouches slightly and aims it at the window, eyes owlishly blinking. |
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But the conflict in Ukraine is disconcertingly similar to the kind that Russian forces have consistently war-gamed and planned for. |
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Finally, two small interventions at Billy's and Jack's enable us to have a look in the house interiors, which look disconcertingly alike. |
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Specters sometimes drifted throughout the area, watching him with disconcertingly blank faces of incorporeal ectoplasm and dematerializing seconds later. |
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Perhaps more disconcertingly, the defense complains that simply meeting with Manning is unjustifiably difficult. |
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So far, five episodes of LA Shrinks have aired, and I find them disconcertingly awful. |
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As I entered the residence in Tehran, I found the whole spectacle weirdly, disconcertingly familiar. |
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The very landscape, cluttered with history, was disconcertingly filled with evidence of the changelessness of things. |
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There was also a disconcertingly messianic intensity to his eyes. |
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He was so disconcertingly interested in my life that I realized I hadn't asked him a single question. |
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The burly V8 is disconcertingly responsive and pleasant to work with despite its split road-track personality. |
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That new world order is disconcertingly similar to the bad old world order that we have just left behind. |
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The sublime success of this funeral monument dedicated to Matisse is also disconcertingly simple. |
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Those you encounter along the way are potential trailblazers in the disconcertingly diverse world of the creative arts. |
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Most disconcertingly, this modest spending increase on independent Canadian programming has not filtered down equitably through the different genres, nor has it been applied evenly throughout the country. |
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Blaye has a population of 5000 residents and my first sight of Blaye itself was the ubiquitous out of town supermarket, quickly followed by a cemetery rather disconcertingly situated right next door to the hospital! |
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Now I'm here, what I had taken for a hyper-real acrylic fantasy turns out to be disconcertingly realistic, another example of Hockney's gift for capturing some essence of wherever or whomever he paints. |
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With an original staging designed, a bold artistic concept, a disconcertingly moving audio background, an avant-garde technological performance, astonishing light effects, GL events teams met all the challenges. |
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While the Hayabusa is clearly not suited for beginners, seasoned riders will find it disconcertingly easy to maneuver, boosting their confidence instead of overwhelming them. |
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Chadar means bed sheet or blanket in Hindi, and it is an apt name for a 40-mile journey mostly spent walking on the frozen, sometimes disconcertingly thin surface of the Zanskar River, a major tributary of the Indus. |
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Generous, with no thought for his own financial gain, Frédéric is a disconcertingly modest man who has always refused to bask in the glory of his genius. |
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His rhymes are jarringly off or disconcertingly exact, and his ragged stanzas vary from lines of one word to lines that meander the length of a paragraph, often interrupted by inapposite digressions. |
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