The painting is captioned with a quote from Nichols, explaining that all nationality disappears as a combatant drowns. |
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If anything, the faster fan drowns out the high-pitched whine with lower-pitched wind noise. |
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The wind gets up then, and the hail it flings against the eastside window drowns her voice in white noise. |
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The bark of seals drowns out the din of the city you left behind, and at night, the canal's placid silence is just what you need to decompress. |
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The organic roughness of his shaky tones periodically overwhelms and drowns out the impassive stillness of his collaborator. |
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The hum of these newfangled doodads drowns out any conversation in the house. |
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And will continue to be so as long as the peal of wedding bells drowns out everything else. |
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The villains all had names like Barry the Baptist, so called because he drowns his victims, and Hatchet Harry. |
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Although she loves Bond, Lynd reveals herself as a double agent working against him, and later drowns. |
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At times, perhaps, their voice drowns out some of the other groups, in my judgment. |
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Dressed in elegant clothes that weigh her down, she drowns in a stream filled with flowers. |
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It drowns out calls and disorientates the animals, scaring them away from their usual habitats, where they feed and reproduce. |
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Lifesaving often comes down to a race in the water to rescue a person in distress before the victim drowns. |
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The past drowns them, depresses them, and scares them just like a haunting ghost. |
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If he drowns, he may lose his physical life, but if his spirit stumbles, he may lose the life of spirit. |
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The donkey jumps over the parapet of the bridge into the river and he drowns. |
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The drowns of the nature is simplified. They are in harmony with the abstract motifs of the back and the sides. |
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During the day, the Sun's brilliance floods the sky and drowns out the light from the other objects in the sky. |
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The sound of a singing radio drowns in the noise of engines, laughter and mechanical rattle. |
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He drowns in the muddy water in the road in front of their house. |
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I fear that this worshipful praise drowns out criticism and that we are robbed of the benefits of conducting an open public debate over the course of economic policy. |
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Intertwined with her Orphean ordeal is a Japanese folk tale about a man who drowns himself after learning that his bride is secretly a bird. |
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Trapped in a barren 20-year-old marriage, Doc drowns his disappointment in alcohol and fantasizes about Marie, their young boarder. |
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Simplistic chord structures and things just very impressive in the way that a lot of old heavy metal music is very penetrating and domineering and drowns things out. |
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It is the pride that kills love and friendship, the silence that drowns expectations and undermines happiness. |
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In Chandni Chowk, the chugging of generators drowns out the growl of cars and auto-rickshaws. |
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Speak, even though our inner noise drowns out Your voice! |
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Deepdry-bearded grey whelmed why-wizard, ah! dare you pace the plague-pressioned pale-painpincèd lair Which darkness drowns and daylight deaths, despairs the days? |
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But senior PP figures have openly fanned conspiracy theories that still try to establish some link between the Islamists and ETA. The noise over the March 2004 bombings drowns out the PP's more centrist message. |
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Mr. Lebel: He muddles so well that he just drowns himself in rhetoric. |
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For example, you might throw a baby into the water and as a consequence the baby drowns, or you might simply fail to rescue a baby that is already in the water and as a consequence of your failure to rescue the baby, it dies. |
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A 35-page document that removes the most difficult items is not a successful document: it is a document that drowns its difficulties in a sea of pages. |
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A transparent world makes secrets history and drowns us in data. |
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The Rainbow takes the dust from the air and drowns it in the water. |
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The mouse is baited to the top of the container where it falls into the bucket and drowns. |
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The discussion o f narrative seriality and binary structures in the news drowns important insights in critical dogma. |
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She drinks from a thimble, defends herself with a sewing needle, and almost drowns in a mud-filled porridge bowl. |
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Gramps drags Matt down to the river, drowns him, and all too willingly becomes the Kanima's master instead of killing it like everyone he knows thought he surely would. |
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Such is her shame and despair that she hangs herself in a barn, or perhaps from the great kitchen fireplace lintel, or else she drowns herself in a shallow pool. |
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The rare breeds hatchery business has challenged them, Drowns says. |
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