The last twenty years have witnessed some dramatic developments in organizations and the relations between them. |
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They were not to know that Friday would bring another day of dramatic action. |
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The aesthetically perfect world of Los Nubes is perpetually aglow with the warm light of an autumn sunset, or dramatic moonlight. |
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His generally lush and highly coloured realisations of the instrumental continuo add further dramatic weight. |
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The team took the opposition down to the wire and were knocked out in a dramatic penalty shoot out. |
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But before I could make my dramatic exit, Chad appeared out of nowhere and grabbed my wrist, restraining me from movement. |
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What happened in that dramatic 13th frame was that Stevens got the yellow with a lucky glance off the pink only to snooker himself on the green. |
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For a car that lives life on the redline, you might expect more dramatic looks. |
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Once again, at the mention of said dizzy-eyed shooting guard, my heart made a dramatic leap, causing me to nearly fall out of my chair. |
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Seek yawned, stretching his mouth to an unusually large size and giving a dramatic sigh. |
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Goya's painting represents the most dramatic scene in which Don Juan arrives at Don Gonzalo's tomb in a fierce thunderstorm. |
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He was literally larger than life and had an impossibly dramatic Wagnerian voice. |
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The dramatic crisis stems from Galileo's enforced abjuration in 1633 of his belief in a heliocentric universe. |
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Few of the dramatic postglacial changes in global environment escaped the attention of aboriginal humans. |
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Ireland were not about to ease off, and emphasised the point with Henderson's dramatic arrival in midfield. |
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Irresistibly propelled by its walking bass, Mirrors of Fire is a driving, dramatic piece which never loses its superbly focused energy. |
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Most assuredly not, says Robinson, who attributes her dramatic transformation to the magic lick of a mascara wand and a touch of gloss. |
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Video has a place on blogs, especially in reporting about tsunamis and other events that are dramatic and not abstract. |
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Indeed, its dramatic argument is that such a personality either abstracts itself out of existence or falls into contradiction and self-destructs. |
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The dramatic colours, earthy abundance and fruitful generosity accentuate the passionate spirit that is essentially Corsican. |
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The Castle's gardens lie in a dramatic ravine which was once a quarry, and are particularly pretty in autumn. |
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The absence of dramatic action was of little account to audiences used to the lyrical pastoral play. |
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Well, the death of the queen mother, Queen Mother Elizabeth, ends a long and often dramatic chapter in British royal history. |
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According to dramatic new biological evidence, it seems that women have been opting for water births since time began. |
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The crowd, jazzed up by the dramatic win, refused to leave, staying in the park, cheering something we thought we might never see. |
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For a more dramatic look, Margaret emphasises the eyes with a dark brown eyeliner across the waterline and above the top lash line. |
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His generally lush and highly coloured realisations of the instrumental continuo adds further dramatic weight. |
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Now everything is geared up for a dramatic conclusion this Sunday as the sport's top riders race to the wire in search of title glory. |
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Pryor gives the best performance of his career and proves that he can truly act in a dramatic role as well. |
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It has been seen that varying temperatures have a dramatic effect on the growth rates of some actinians. |
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There were some very dramatic phrases that came out of the anti-racist activism of the Communist Party. |
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Moore's law is not concerned with radical new technologies that could have a dramatic effect. |
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Diuretics can cause quite dramatic temporary weight loss by causing the body to excrete water. |
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He was at the helm of the dramatic advances that took place in clinical radiology in the second half of the 20th century. |
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The wind power industry has been transformed by dramatic breakthroughs in efficiency, economy, and adaptability. |
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Actor and dramatic writer and adaptor Rodney Ackland, is responsible for at least 30 plays and adaptations. |
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As with most programs adapted from true events, the adaptors took some dramatic license. |
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The new year has brought some dramatic changes at the loch with the addition of three new fisheries. |
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Let's begin our coverage of the dramatic rescue of nine trapped coal miners in Pennsylvania. |
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He gave an animated jump of surprise when he saw me, laying a dramatic hand on his chest. |
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Slick dramatic lighting and a varied, enjoyable color design smooth out the film's disjointing plot jump-cuts and occasional coincidences. |
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Perhaps the most dramatic of all bathroom trends is the rise of the wet room. |
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If the hedge funds shun European junk, that dramatic shift could drive up rates on these securities even further. |
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Ranji David is Appu, Rashmi Kothari and 13 others join in to make up a dramatic interplay of laughs and guffaws, back talks and whatnots. |
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The dramatic reversal illustrates the extent to which the media's polling results are simply measuring the impact of their own coverage. |
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An early equaliser was topped by a dramatic headed winner just as extra-time beckoned. |
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In the case of a slow degradation of the quality of justice, nothing particularly dramatic would occur. |
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But buyers who expected to see a dramatic difference in their anatomies were sorely disappointed. |
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I stress this pattern because July has been a wet month, a dramatic reversal from the driest June on record. |
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The following section describes those experiments showing the dramatic effect of rapidness of flow rate changes on the dynamics of this system. |
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Within changing environments created by dramatic lighting effects, kaleidoscopic clusters appeared and dissolved. |
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But what strikes most visitors is the dramatic altar and reredos, or carved altarpiece, with tall statues of saints backed by scarlet curtains. |
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Her future takes a dramatic turn when she follows an uncharacteristically rash instinct and travels to the slums of Bombay. |
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The Kansan native, the longest-serving Republican leader in the Senate, has seen a dramatic change in those serving and their goals. |
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The self-defeating nature of imperialism is slyly suggested through a dramatic reversal that exploits the notion of the white man's burden. |
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The present tense of the actual verbs in the dialogue, like the mimetic form of direct rather than reported speech is a dramatic illusion. |
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He introduced a new dramatic role for orchestration with scores that are richly textured, subtle, and profound. |
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The data therefore chronicle a dramatic reversal in the direction of invasion. |
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Insurance companies say the principal reason for the dramatic increases is the spiralling burden of reinsurance on all the major insurers. |
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His main challenge will be to draw down sufficient funds to bring about a dramatic change to the woeful state of the country's infrastructure. |
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An innovative mix of documentary and dramatic reconstruction vividly recreates the author's extraordinary life. |
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The report calls for a dramatic restructuring of how aid is allotted in the region. |
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Using a mix of dramatic reconstructions and interviews, the film recreates a story that has passed into mountaineering legend. |
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They report on the dramatic increase in venture ratings while also commenting on the pressures to conform to the norms of an MBA education. |
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It makes for a dramatic backdrop to explore cuisine of Senegal, Cameroon and Mali, among others. |
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Last year witnessed a dramatic downturn and 2002 promises to be little better, despite earlier hopes of a rebound in the second half of the year. |
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These are huge differences that would inevitably have dramatic repercussions on the overall cost of credit. |
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Jones explained his act as a dramatic remedy for boredom and chronic depression. |
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Among regular clergy, the orders of friars retained a slightly double-edged esteem among the laity as skilled confessors and dramatic preachers. |
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This collection examines the period from the early 1980s that witnessed the beginning of dramatic changes in East-West relations. |
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The 1970s witnessed dramatic changes in policy rationales for state involvement in economic affairs. |
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Edgar Allen Poe has a very unique style of writing in many ways. Poe tends to write his stories emphasizing dramatic irony and verbal irony |
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It is a dramatic conceptual shift, which can be seen in the archaeological remains. |
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The band knew what they were doing by recording an album with more soaring, soulful and dramatic songs than short, instant-single zingers. |
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She underwent vertebral kyphoplasty and had a dramatic reduction in her pain almost immediately. |
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The period since World War II has witnessed dramatic changes in the preferences of individuals and their allocation of time and resources. |
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It is no coincidence that this is the dramatic ritual that Jesus and the disciples were enacting at the Last Supper. |
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In only six weeks, he and his crew took part in three dramatic rescues, which earned him the admiration of the nation. |
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Their dramatic alt-rock had more than a few echoes of The Bends and OK Computer. |
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But despite a strong start, France came back with a dramatic last-minute victory. |
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During the nineteenth century almost all poets wrote poetry in dramatic form. |
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The national market was finding its own level without any dramatic fluctuation. |
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Sometimes the scoreline escapes me but I can always remember spectacular tries, last-gasp goals or a dramatic match-saving tackle. |
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The recession has resulted in unprecedented levels of unemployment and a dramatic increase in poverty. |
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It has been widely hailed as a wonder drug by many patients and specialists in skin care, often making a dramatic difference to acne sufferers. |
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Yet Strauss manages to create an opera which wrings every dramatic drop from the text. |
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One of the more dramatic resurrections in recent cinema history has seen Peter Fonda bring back his debut film as director, The Hired Hand. |
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It was one of history's most dramatic and complete political resurrections. |
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Both shows will use computer-generated imagery and dramatic reconstructions to transport viewers back to ancient times. |
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A dramatic surge in support for Sinn Fein pushed the republicans ahead of the SDLP for the first time. |
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In particular, Stearn rails against dramatic reconstructions using actors, which Schama says are essential to bring history alive on the screen. |
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A farmer today told how he fought to free two people from the wreckage of their car after a dramatic crash on a remote country lane. |
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Like the kinda thing you hear in a movie, you know, in a very dramatic scene. |
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After a dramatic recitative which Genaux sings with some interesting vocal color, the aria is as light and as refreshing as a cool breeze. |
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The lines of communications there were focused through Seoul, and the recapture of the city promised dramatic results. |
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Statistics provide a much less dramatic picture of Americanization through television. |
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In some ways it's a mess of a film, in which the dramatic face-offs alternate with TV sitcom brawling. |
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Her bright dramatic soprano held the audience spellbound and her fierce, iron-willed portrayal dominated the second half of the evening. |
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Even TV shows are showing real life crime cases in lieu of dramatic reenactments. |
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Allison was dressed in a completely red bodice with dramatic keyhole front, draped waist, and cascading front tulip hemline. |
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Yesterday public schools in Yorkshire blamed the rises on a dramatic increase in key costs faced by all institutions. |
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Police have warned boat enthusiasts to be cautious during wild weather, after a dramatic rescue on the River Derwent yesterday. |
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To your average punter, dance is to the dramatic arts what free jazz is to the musical. |
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Boyhood's end is a short but dramatic work full of conflicting emotions and nostalgia for days of yore. |
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She just loves the dramatic ruby red colour and the fresh raspberry taste. |
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Barring a dramatic change, it looked as if the British Government would have no option but to suspend the institutions and reintroduce direct rule from London. |
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The dramatic changes I experienced after just a few lessons were because some of my problems were caused or exacerbated by quite easily rectifiable postural faults. |
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It was dramatic and funny and hilarious and uncensored and real and intense. |
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And no other central bank has announced a dramatic shift in its holdings of U.S. government debt. |
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But these dramatic increases in spending and teachers have not yielded a notable change in overall student outcomes. |
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In Mary, the latest scientific evidence is combined with stunning computer graphics and dramatic recreations to reveal the real woman behind the image. |
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The yachtswoman scored her greatest feat yesterday when she won a dramatic solo transatlantic race in a record-breaking time after a tense fortnight at sea. |
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As Schama notes, the dagger used to puncture the hero's eye in the Blinding of Samson, one of Rembrandt's most dramatic history paintings, is a Javanese kris. |
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Unst is precisely the kind of place where locals would pay high electricity bills even if they did not have to contend with severe winter weather and dramatic wind chill. |
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The study blamed rapidly expanding road networks and a sharp increase in flights for the dramatic jump in air, noise and light pollution in the past decade. |
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During a dramatic late surge, there was a moment when separation looked a likely scenario. |
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Prague Fatale is authentic because Kerr can muffle the horror of this epoch in dramatic irony but he can also shout it out loud. |
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It is not uncommon for patients to have residual physical or cognitive problems following myocardial infarction and the dramatic treatments now administered. |
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The tide is turning on some of these questions, and the growth of ABT's dramatic ballet repertory is a good context for looking back at our recent past. |
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Louie Psihoyos' The cove, on the other hand, feels entirely fresh, and is as dramatic and gripping as any live-action thriller. |
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Cara could be very dramatic and confrontational in her writing, as well as in life. |
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In a dramatic twist on mistletoe reproduction, their seeds explode, literally. |
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His dramatic rehabilitation since then has not always been smooth, and in particular it is the evaluation of his early work that has been a roller-coaster. |
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As part of the eviction process, each week the contestant with the least number of votes is forced to walk the plank for their dramatic final exit from the show. |
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There were dramatic changes in the role of women and men, in the value placed on women's work within the traditional economy and within the internal dynamics of their society of origin. |
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They are not fleeing dramatic scenes of battle, but they are just as deracinated as if they were. |
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The tenth-century west was a lively religious landscape, featuring dramatic conversions of the powerful who put their armour upon the altar and renounced the world. |
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In its own way, its story of survival is every bit as dramatic as the films it accompanies. |
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As Chua advances into the nineteenth century, the paradoxes and ambiguities concerning the nature of absolute music pile up, to considerable dramatic effect. |
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It opens with Huckabee's dramatic recollection of going through security at the airport. |
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On top of these requirements they had to be strong enough to weather the storms of the Channel and the dramatic tide differences of the Normandy coast. |
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But I want to intersperse the two because, if I keep doing dramatic things, they'll have to put me in a cage because I get so emotionally wrought up. |
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In the end, I find it never fails to modernize even the most dramatic things. |
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The reeded footposts with undercut foliage are typical of Salem beds of the Federal period, but the dramatic canted, carved paw feet move the bed into the classical style. |
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One must look back to the early 1930s to find such a dramatic reversal. |
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In Philadelphia, for example, students rallied at the Liberty Bell where they dressed up like the founding fathers for a dramatic reading of the Declaration. |
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The highlights, however, are less of a dramatic style shift than the Bangs M.O. debuted in January. |
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Moyer said he saw a dramatic difference between what Chesapeake usually charged compared to other energy companies in the area. |
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The banger drivers will be in cars with engines less than two litres in size but the wrecking will be as dramatic as ever, says a raceway spokesman. |
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Critics point out that the city has witnessed a dramatic growth in employment due to an influx of high-technology manufacturing and service industries. |
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Yet even as the Germans wallowed in bitter self-pity, another defeated superpower underwent a dramatic turnaround. |
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He still had no fever, but his blood work showed a dramatic decline in platelets. |
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The actor showed tremendous range in the role, bouncing between his wacky stand-up persona and gentler dramatic work. |
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The characters are inscrutable, the plotting careless, and, at every opportunity, Bowles subverts the dramatic stakes. |
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But a story this big, this consequential, needs a dramatis personae of dramatic people. |
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I have been the village postman in Troutbeck for 18 years and during that time have witnessed dramatic changes in the availability of reasonable houses to rent or buy. |
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It's the last word in dramatic decadence, rippling with eroticism. |
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How exciting were the 120 minutes of regular play in Brazil vs. chile even prior to the dramatic shootout ending? |
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So far, our work indicates no dramatic impact of released birds on the Adonis blue butterfly, but we have insufficient data to test for subtle effects. |
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But if he never lets his characters off the leash, he leaves them a vast space in which to roam, giving the film a dramatic structure that's radically open and formless. |
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Dark colors are dramatic but will make a compact space seem smaller. |
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In this show of 36 impeccably printed black-and-white pictures, Cruz juxtaposed images of the Yanomami with the dramatic waterfalls of Iguacu on the Argentine-Brazil border. |
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Townsley's goal and then Ged Brannan's penalty, two minutes into injury time, represented a dramatic reversal for an unfortunate Dunfermline side. |
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That Nolan was there to play his part was a near-miracle in itself after the youngster's lucky escape from that morning's dramatic smash that wrecked his car. |
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All the world loves a dramatic comeback story, and this pop icon is primed to prove she's still got what it takes to make the kids yelp and shriek with glee. |
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The Welsh laid down their weapons for the feast but the drunken merry making came to a dramatic halt when William challenged them never again to bear arms in his domains. |
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The return of the minor mode of the first aria at the conclusion provides dramatic resolution to the work where the poet's deceived heart is inflected with irony. |
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The cello adds an elegant dramatic touch to a song many have found rather devoid of emotion. |
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It is well accepted that nutrient intake, body energy stores, and changes in BW and energy stores have dramatic effects on reproductive processes in the beef cow. |
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One of the most salient features of the economic crisis in Sweden during the 1990s was the dramatic increase in long-term social assistance recipiency. |
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There were dramatic increases in productivity as a result of this product. |
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Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang has left the company, the latest dramatic change at the top of the embattled Internet company. |
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We know that DHEA does not cause the dramatic fat-loss and muscle-bulking effects of anabolic steroid drugs. |
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The Guineas victories of Ghanaati's direct ancestresses were both dramatic affairs. |
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Young anorexic or bulimic people encourage each other to lose more weight with photos of their own dramatic weightloss. |
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The most dramatic and best preserved scenes, however, show two Jataka stories of the former lives of the Buddha. |
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His dramatic characters concretely enflesh and speak the existential antinomies which affect their lives. |
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Music is key to heart-stopping moments in films like Jaws, Titanic, War of the Worlds and Apocolypse Now, adding dramatic tension to every scene. |
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At that dramatic moment in American history, the shrewd Kansan stalked like a big game hunter. |
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Wild now feels she has no choice but to temporarily abandon the documentary format altogether and reapproach the subject in a dramatic feature. |
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For example, reassessments performed between 1990 and 1995 failed to reflect the dramatic downturn in real estate values during that time period. |
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After 10 days, I noticed a dramatic improvement to my keratosis pilaris, and three weeks on, I'm still impressed with the results. |
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The way forward for both is defined more by gradualism than dramatic recompensation for the past. |
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Life is set to take a dramatic turn once she meets a young activist named Khanum in New York. |
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Many indigenous populations have undergone a dramatic decline and even extinction, and remain threatened in many parts of the world. |
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The amends he had made in after life were lost sight of in the dramatic glare of the original act. |
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In Latin America, the most dramatic results of discrimination have an element of aporophobia, that is, revulsion and hatred for the poor. |
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More likely, Nichols sensed his dramatic gimmick wasn't panning out, and so took refuge in the inscrutability of artsiness. |
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In this dramatic picture, the nation is literally decimated, and even the tenth which remains is subjected to a further destruction. |
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The laptop ad that first showed an IT team with a problem and then showed FooCorp as the solution used emotional pivot as its dramatic structure. |
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Spotlights in egg-crating over counters give dramatic emphasis to cabinets at night. |
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When reviewing the research results, we were able to see the emotional structure of the ad was less dramatic than we had intended. |
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The diversity of crustaceans testifies to a dramatic Lower Carboniferous eumalacostracan radiation. |
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In the end, nothing that dramatic happened, but after our night together, everything became imbued with what I now see as a certain fatedness. |
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The fourth wall is the imaginary barrier between the stage and the audience, and the phrase is a metaphor for the dramatic frame. |
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There was something dramatic and theatrical in the very funeral ceremonies with which Demetrius was honored. |
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He was rediscovered, however, by the Renaissance, whose writers were impressed with his dramatic presentation of the Imperial age. |
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The Urnfield period saw a dramatic increase in population in the region, probably due to innovations in technology and agriculture. |
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Alfred undoubtedly exaggerated for dramatic effect the abysmal state of learning in England during his youth. |
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But the change was dramatic if measured by the elimination of the English nobility or the loss of Old English as a literary language. |
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Most dramatic was the 1605 Gunpowder Plot to blow up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament. |
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His English coronation took place on 25 July, with elaborate allegories provided by dramatic poets such as Thomas Dekker and Ben Jonson. |
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In particular, he expanded the dramatic potential of characterisation, plot, language, and genre. |
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The stalemate was broken in the summer of 1794 with dramatic French victories. |
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Although the French Revolution had a dramatic impact in numerous areas of Europe, the French colonies felt a particular influence. |
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The Paleozoic was a time of dramatic geological, climatic, and evolutionary change. |
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Some of the most dramatic of these formations can be seen in Thailand's Phangnga Bay and at Halong Bay in Vietnam. |
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The southernmost part of the park covers the dramatic central section of Hadrian's Wall, dating from the Roman occupation. |
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With its huge waterfalls and caves, this dramatic coastline has become an adventure playground for both climbers and explorers. |
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However, the difference is most dramatic in the western coastal islands of Scotland. |
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Middle English developed out of Late Old English, seeing many dramatic changes in its grammar, pronunciation and orthography. |
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Cornwall's rich heritage and dramatic landscape have inspired writers since at least the 19th century. |
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Some dramatic examples of these rice paddies populate the Banaue Rice Terraces in the mountains of Luzon in the Philippines. |
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Very often, new museums and concert halls were the most dramatic examples of the new styles. |
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The dramatic narrative of the close of Wolsey's life becomes manyfold more impressive from being told to the discrowned Queen Catherine. |
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The First World War measures had a particularly dramatic effect upon mild ale. |
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The draconian measures applied to the brewing industry during the First World War had a particularly dramatic effect upon mild. |
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We will examine these works briefly, grouping them into narrative, didactic, hagiographic, lyric, satiric and dramatic literature. |
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Her translation of Iphigeneia at Aulis is the first known dramatic work by a woman in English. |
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From 1660 onwards, new dramatic genres arose, mutated, and intermixed very rapidly. |
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Not published until 1920, it is now widely recognised as an English novel of great dramatic force and intellectual subtlety. |
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Towards the end of the period, the early dramatic precursors of opera such as monody, the madrigal comedy, and the intermedio are seen. |
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In opera, vocal soloists and choirs perform staged dramatic works with an orchestra providing accompaniment. |
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The composition of Dido and Aeneas gave Purcell his first chance to write a sustained musical setting of a dramatic text. |
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In 1691, he wrote the music for what is sometimes considered his dramatic masterpiece, King Arthur, or The British Worthy. |
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They also share the lyrical and dramatic qualities of Handel's Italian operas. |
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He must allow the camera to determine the proper emphasis and the most effective dramatic highlights. |
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As a young man Gerard Olivier had considered a stage career and was a dramatic and effective preacher. |
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The most dramatic altercation occurred in Christchurch, New Zealand, when her shoes were not found and Leigh refused to go onstage without them. |
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Horatio was the only classical role which Caine, who had never received dramatic training, would ever play. |
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Cameras were often undercranked or overcranked to improve exposures or for dramatic effect. |
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When writing music for film, one goal is to sync dramatic events happening on screen with musical events in the score. |
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Before completing film school, he began to direct, produce and write the screenplay to the dramatic short The Weaver's Wife. |
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Particularly notable was the development of the dramatic monologue, a form used by many poets in this period, but perfected by Browning. |
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Dennis Potter's most distinctive dramatic work was produced for television. |
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The marathon saw a dramatic finish with the first man to enter the stadium, Etienne Gailly of Belgium, exhausted and nearly unable to run. |
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He holed a dramatic shot from the rough from about 50 yards for birdie on the 18th hole, to finish in a tie for fourth. |
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The matches culminated in one of the single most dramatic putts in the history of golf. |
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Mercedes' Rosberg held off Red Bull's Webber to win a dramatic 2013 British Grand Prix overshadowed by a series of Pirelli tyre failures. |
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In addition, for French the actual pronunciation is given, due to the dramatic differences between spelling and pronunciation. |
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What is verifiable is that the ice cores indicate Greenland has had dramatic temperature shifts many times over the past 100,000 years. |
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Following the elections in May 2016, the composition of the Assembly changed in the most dramatic fashion since the beginning of the Assembly. |
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He imposed rational legal systems and demonstrated how dramatic changes were possible. |
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Jacob argues that there has been a dramatic shift in the historiography of the Reformation. |
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These dramatic changes were accompanied by social unrest and the rise of populist, socialist, and anarchist movements. |
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This would now have a dramatic effect on the conflict as 33 divisions were now released from the Eastern Front for deployment to the West. |
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On this first day, there were no major initiatives and no dramatic events except for the nation's transport being at a standstill. |
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One widely publicized event was the dramatic toppling of a large statue of Saddam in Baghdad's Firdos Square. |
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Codified constitutions are often the product of some dramatic political change, such as a revolution. |
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Sociologists and criminologists have not reached consensus on the explanation for the dramatic decrease in the city's crime rate. |
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The rising affluence of the Fifties and Sixties was underpinned by sustained full employment and a dramatic rise in workers' wages. |
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Edgar added the dramatic twist that events were being regularly interrupted by the students to question the professor's version of events. |
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With dramatic insight he captured for all time the death throes of a great city. |
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Kahlo was deeply influenced by indigenous Mexican culture, which is apparent in her paintings' bright colors and dramatic symbolism. |
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By 1912 Wales had 34 theatres and many halls licensed for dramatic performances. |
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He chose Henry Hart Milman's 1822 dramatic poem based on the life and death of Saint Margaret the Virgin for its basis. |
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There has been much discussion about Gilbert's proper place in British literary and dramatic history. |
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Moments of greatest dramatic intensity in a book musical are often performed in song. |
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The original tower was much smaller and less dramatic than the film's version. |
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He argued that this was because the spectator is aware that he is witnessing a dramatic performance. |
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The shamal, a northwesterly wind common during June and July, causes dramatic sandstorms. |
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As many as 30 cinemas were reported to have been converted to live stages, producing a wide range of comedies and dramatic productions. |
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From the 1960s it was attended by a theater dedicated to social and religious issues and to the flourishing of schools of dramatic art. |
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The area is fringed to the north and east by dramatic coastal scenery and is home to large, internationally important colonies of seabirds. |
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Mary's courage at her execution helped establish her popular image as the heroic victim in a dramatic tragedy. |
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For the previous two centuries, the emphasis in fine jewelry had been creating dramatic settings for diamonds. |
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There are regular dramatic and comedic performances staged at the Barron theatre. |
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When paper bank notes were first introduced in England in the 1790s, they resulted in a dramatic rise in counterfeiting. |
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This has had a dramatic effect on property prices and has also led to calls for improvements in services and infrastructure in the area. |
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The 18th hole once again proved itself among the most dramatic and exciting in championship golf. |
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The tales continue to inspire new fiction, dramatic retellings, visual artwork, and research. |
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After the Industrial Revolution, there was a dramatic decline in young men working in agriculture. |
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This relative decline was, however, eclipsed by the dramatic collapse in Labour support at the 1983 General Election. |
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It is one of the most dramatic and scenic landscape areas in southern Britain. |
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In November 2004, a dramatic report of dolphin intervention came from New Zealand. |
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The 1840s saw the start of a dramatic increase in the amount of coal excavated within Glamorgan. |
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After Christmas however, Rush went into overdrive as Liverpool began a dramatic rise from mid table to the top of the table. |
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These primitive forms were later elaborated with dialogue and dramatic action. |
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In 2017, he had supporting roles in the dramatic comedies Brad's Status and Home Again. |
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He was awarded the freedom of the borough of Neath Port Talbot, Wales in 2008 for his services in the field of the dramatic arts. |
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The activities of burrowing animals and fish have a dramatic churning effect on muddy seabeds. |
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Flatfishes have been cited as dramatic examples of evolutionary adaptation. |
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However, different populations or ecotypes may specialize and some can have a dramatic impact on certain prey species. |
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One of the most dramatic is the Great Barrier Reef off northeastern Australia with chains of reef patches. |
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It is one of the extreme points of the island of Ireland and is a major tourist attraction, noted for its dramatic cliff scenery. |
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The acquisition or loss of a star can have dramatic effects on the success of a restaurant. |
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Where the sea meets higher parts of the sloping landscape, dramatic cliffs emerge very suddenly. |
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If a zone undergoes dramatic changes in temperature with depth, it contains a thermocline. |
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The dramatic coastline of Hoy greets visitors travelling to Orkney by ferry from the Scottish mainland. |
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The ice sheets profoundly affected Earth's climate by causing drought, desertification, and a dramatic drop in sea levels. |
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The role is the latest dramatic outing for Radcliffe since the end of the successful Potter franchise. |
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Although there are several Bronze Age sites on the island, they provide less dramatic remains. |
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Some major economic reforms undertaken by the government since 2003 include a dramatic slashing of customs and tariffs. |
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This dramatic rise in diversity was marked by periodic, massive losses of diversity classified as mass extinction events. |
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In West Africa, the decline of the Atlantic slave trade in the 1820s caused dramatic economic shifts in local polities. |
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Stesichorus exercised an important influence on the representation of myth in 6th century art and on the development of Athenian dramatic poetry. |
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All these effects can combine to produce a dramatic drop in sea surface temperature over a large area in just a few days. |
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It is worth noting that some genetic evidence supports a dramatic increase in population size before human migration out of Africa. |
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The event is the most dramatic climate event in the SD Holocene glaciochemical record. |
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In the west, the coastline is high and dramatic where the plateau of Exmoor meets the sea, with high cliffs and waterfalls. |
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The match was the first time since the 2006 World Cup that Beckham had skippered England and marked a dramatic turnaround for Beckham. |
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While both pergolas and arbors are most dramatic cloaked in climbing, flowing plants, only a pergola will stand naked as a piece of architecture. |
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Laura gets her chance in a dramatic storm and shipwreck, and helps save the island. |
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The distance in time to the event it describes may mean that it was embellished to add a dramatic touch. |
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The Frome has suffered a dramatic decline in the run of salmon in recent years. |
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The most dramatic and influential changes Marius made to the Roman army were named the Marian Reforms. |
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He then discusses the dramatic effect of Western civilization on others in the past 500 years of history. |
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The most dramatic change in medieval Gaul was the collapse of trade and town life. |
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This created a dramatic deficit in Iceland's trade, and no new ships were built as a result. |
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The western parts of mountains are cut by fjords producing a dramatic landscape. |
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