Each piece has been expertly selected to encapsulate the essence of its creator. |
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Tomita also learned the essence of kaiseki, a highly specialized service, which often accompanies the Japanese tea ceremony. |
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His art is wonderfully representative of the essence of the philosophy of Indian aesthetics. |
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The fanciful asymmetry of the French rococo style was considered the essence of beauty. |
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Use bold type for emphasis, use spaces between lines and points so that it's easy to see the essence of your message at a glance. |
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Political realism in essence reduces to the political-ethical principle that might is right. |
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Not only that, the filmmakers created a provocative action film that ponders the essence of reality and identity. |
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The essence of fabrication about someone's political position is to take a kernel of truth and apply so much distortion as to turn it into a lie. |
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It's also rather delicious when you replace the vanilla essence with peppermint. |
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Whip the evaporated milk until frothy and then add the jelly, cheese, vanilla essence and lemon juice. |
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Put one teaspoon of vanilla essence in the yolk and two teaspoons of baking powder into the egg white. |
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It doesn't matter who you are or what you are, in essence we all carry the same powerful feeling. |
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The rest were in essence apolitical, which made their attitude even more alarming. |
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But, in essence there is now something bigger and more important than just being here. |
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To wish it were otherwise is in essence to wish that we were not physical beings at all. |
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The geniuses that we so often read about and hear about are in essence no different from us. |
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I have changed my mind, for better or worse, because in essence this is a diary even though I don't want it to be. |
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But with such a worrying deadline, speed is of the essence for the company. |
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Time is of the essence because of the enormity of the state's pollution problems. |
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I suppose I don't need to say that speed is of the essence here, but I will anyway. |
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Obviously speed is of the essence in this case if such an application is to be made. |
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Add the vanilla essence once the sugar is dissolved and a squeeze of lemon to thicken the syrup. |
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He said the town's essence was encapsulated in the sounds echoing around the air shafts of the tenement blocks. |
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Spots on all finishes except lacquer can be treated with a cloth dampened with spirits of camphor, essence of peppermint or oil of wintergreen. |
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Whatsoever essence it derives from earth or water, all that conduces to its bitterness, its acridity, its unpleasantness. |
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More than that, it is the essence of delicacy and tactfulness in American film. |
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It was not the warm, gentle radiance of a flame, but an eerie, greenish glow whose essence was cold and lifeless. |
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Light according to Maxwell is an electromagnetic wave, no different in essence to radio waves or the microwaves that heat up our ready meals. |
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She said the planning officials stressed that by retaining and renovating the existing cottage its historical essence is retained. |
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The film is able to capture the essence of the story, but cannot find the subtle nuances that made the book such a satisfying read. |
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From what I'm led to believe it's all been done in a bit of a cack-handed way and in essence it seems he does not care. |
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This is the essence of patient centred care, and most health professionals strive to achieve it. |
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Certain reductions and approximations had to be made, but the notes sound out the essence of the score. |
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Feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and worthlessness are the essence of depression. |
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The following excerpts of actual teachings present the essence and details of refuge. |
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Like fish and chips and your gran's crocheted tea cosies, Victoria Wood is the very essence of Northern England in all its dark, satanic glory. |
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Left with the core essence of his basically decent character, he then sets about rebuilding his life, bit by bit. |
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The result is history without tears, something palatable and likely to be highly popular, but it isn't in essence a perversion of the truth. |
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Dance became a passion in the sense of understanding bhava and arriving at the essence of what you're saying. |
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Beat the butter, sugar, ground almonds and almond essence together and whiz until just mixed. |
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The man seemed to have grasped the essence of standing aloof from worldly anxieties and vexations. |
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By continuously analyzing war and warfare, their essence and content, the military science develops, acquiring new knowledge. |
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Why did we ever choose to become clumsy land beasts when water is our essence and feels so much like home? |
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Weber, the anchorman of this immortal team, was the essence of unmuscled execution. |
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Tiny electrodes are microfabricated along the walls of the hair-like capillaries, in essence creating a complex grid of electrodes. |
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It is no coincidence that two current bad boys of sports agree on what constitutes the essence of sports. |
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That surprising, sinking, excited feeling may be the essence of thought as felt experience, rather than as bare abstraction. |
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In essence the galaxy is eclipsing the quasar, but paradoxically its gravitational lens effect brightens the light received from the latter. |
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But if they're separated from the essence of music, which is its numinous quality, then the power of music has been debilitated. |
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Many market participants fail to distinguish between the essence of liquidity and marketability. |
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In minimal art, it would seem, are the latent possibilities, the alternatives, which are the essence of creation. |
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Place the water, dates, bicarbonate of soda, ginger, mixed spice and vanilla essence in a pan and bring to the boil then remove from heat. |
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The essence of the Walt Disney company is the ability to tell stories through movies and theme parks. |
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Also the essence of what they're writing about, is deep and touching and meaningful to me. |
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His threnody captured the awful essence of untimely death in early-twentieth-century black societies that prized marriage and reproduction. |
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As a historical feature film, does it correctly capture the essence of the story? |
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Long-term growth will be driven in essence by the increasing affordability of air travel through greater competition. |
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Naming is important in rap and in Afrocentric music in general, where it is an act of invocation that captures the essence of one's being. |
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It is the essence of offences against the person that what is done is done unlawfully. |
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This fight against cultural hegemony and for self-realization is the essence of the feminist struggle. |
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The work of both artists is fuelled by a need to communicate the metaphysical essence of our existence. |
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She says the lack of time which GPs have to treat their patients is destroying the very essence of what it means to be a family doctor. |
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It would succeed in destroying the very essence of what this village is about, its rich countryside heritage. |
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They were also worried that broadcasting the music through microphones would destroy the beauty and essence of the music. |
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The chief aim of this inquiry has been to shed light on the nature and essence of the disagreement between the two. |
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And then sometimes, history is graced by an individual who comes and changes the very essence of humanity. |
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We cared for our guests because not to do so would betray the most profound essence of our humanity. |
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It is obvious that he does not understand the true essence of sport, or human nature. |
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Her portrayal of the sexy evangelist Reno Sweeney was outstanding, catching the very essence of this character. |
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The time has come for architecture and planning to reflect the essence of democracy. |
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The raucous, inscrutable essence of democracy could almost be glimpsed in this maelstrom. |
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Indeed, sometimes the real essence of truth is only to be discovered in the narrative form. |
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Last week she made a chocolate cake and sloshed a huge quantity of vanilla essence into it straight from the bottle. |
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The addition of two drops of vanilla essence in the glasses masked the flavour of both the beverages. |
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The top layer was screwed down to the bottom layer in essence creating a one piece quiet, rigid, non-creaking floor. |
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This is the explosive essence of carnival, and it is driven by music from bandwagons, articulated lorries stacked 30 feet high with speakers. |
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A change in language, in the fundamentals, in the semantics, the grammar, the very essence of the language. |
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To be sure, because God's essence is unknowable, all theologizing ultimately must end in silence. |
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In different words, the essence of much of our own Bill of Rights is reflected therein. |
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They contain more blood than essence in men, and thus promote the growth of the beard and body hair. |
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This conception of truth reflected more on the essence rather than the material manifestation of truth. |
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Students in math know that the essence of the subject lies in theorems and proofs. |
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By that time the very essence of his language has been reforged, and he can no longer either speak or think without allusion to her. |
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His blonde hair was bright and neatly combed, his soft brown eyes alight with the essence of life itself. |
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The writing of socio-cultural reality, where 'writing' is understood in its broad Derridean sense, is the very essence of individuality. |
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In essence the year is split into four equal seasons, each lasting 91 days plus a bit. |
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A hint of seasonal cool is in the dawn, and the round sunsets over the mesquites are the essence of serious dove hunting in Texas. |
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In essence that there was a macho culture which refused to acknowledge the psychological problems engendered by combat. |
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This was the search for the genuine goal and true essence or martial arts on which he spent most of his time. |
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In essence such a program involves the central bank injecting more money into the economy. |
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Indeed if we are vigilant we can see that this world is made up of the natural laws of grace and fluidity, the essence of Mother Earth. |
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Trust is not only at the heart of leadership but forms the essence of all relationships. |
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The album manages to capture the essence and heart of the psalm beautifully. |
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The hero is integral to the culture of a society because the hero is integral to storytelling, the essence of culture. |
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It captures the essence of a short drink, and develops the brand without betraying its long-standing values. |
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For it is in the essence of his behaviour that he should be eccentric, unconventional and rash in the eyes of public opinion. |
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This is in essence a short and rather conventional biography which breaks no new ground but is a good summary of current knowledge. |
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If you don't use some essence of a stereotype, the characters are bland and you can't find the conflict. |
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Therefore make every effort on the path, uniting absolute and relative bodhichitta, which distills the essence of all the sutras and the tantras. |
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Obviously, this was a sterner test but the essence of golf required was very similar to those courses. |
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Virtually all of the headlines and news stories mentioned the one phrase that captured the essence of the findings. |
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Except there is a very sour, very morose and desperate essence in his interpretation. |
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Admittedly, this is a simplistic analogy, but it captures the essence of the issue. |
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Pipe bands and military bands have also gone due to him, the very essence required for a military tattoo. |
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When I was but a young boy I saved up my pocket money to buy all my own decorations for my room, creating in essence my own personal grotto. |
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The essence of these reforms is to further promote and facilitate the making of agreements at the workplace level. |
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Brink makes extensive use of native terminology to explain the essence of Mande aesthetics. |
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The essence of slacktivism is the sensation that you've accomplished something of political impact when you've done nothing. |
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I remember a time when a company asked me to trial their new and all-natural insect repellent made from essence of bog myrtle. |
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The essence of existence is not unity, sameness and continuity, not homogenousness, but diversity and difference, heterogeneousness. |
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Since we choose the style of clothing we wear, we in essence can direct how others perceive us based on our objectives. |
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I have often wondered whether the richness of his voice overshadowed the essence of his musicality. |
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I just did not feel he captured the essence of the doctor, and this hurt the film seeing how much screen time he has. |
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Igbo maskers have a spiritual essence that varies in expression from the comedic to the sacred. |
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I found the final rather involving, which given that rugby is in essence a game of catch taken extremely seriously is not bad going at all. |
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Of course, the essence of the trick in Curran's Case was, by paying out the bonus share dividend, you reduce the value of the original shares. |
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Whatever the case, such ifs and maybes are certainly in keeping with the very essence of salmon fishing. |
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The essence of the tactic of McCarthyism is to de-legitimize one's opponent so as to avoid addressing the substance of his argument. |
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The theme will be to celebrate who and what make up the essence of Keighley. |
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The Zen-derived notion of spontaneous improvisation became the essence of bebop, the post-war jazz movement. |
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According to Heidegger, a tendency to suicide is the ontological essence of human ego. |
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The essence of burning rubber filled the air, and the sound of squealing tires hissed. |
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This is the essence of the hold that Chicano patriarchal power has on many Chicanas. |
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Few Americans think local news coverage fairly captures the essence of daily life and progress in their hometowns. |
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In fact, the ability to perform more than one operation per clock cycle is the essence of the superscalar architecture. |
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The painstakingly crafted detail has always been the essence of a Grimshaw building. |
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He is also working with Blumenthal on chocolates flavoured with the essence of fresh mown grass and leather. |
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A sutra is a code that expresses the essence of all knowledge in a minimum of words. |
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The original codex permitted digestible chunks of text to be presented on physical pages, but the electronic text is in essence pageless. |
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Therefore you need an eclectic smorgasbord of aural delicacies to keep the true essence of a mixtape intact. |
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The essence of dominance is the power to behave independently of competitive pressures. |
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She is and has been a tremendous asset to the organization and exemplary nursing leader who personifies the essence of distinguished service. |
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The truth of a phenomenon is called shunyata, emptiness, which implies that the phenomenon does not possess a truly existent essence or nature. |
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Since variation was the essence of evolution, it was crucial to understand its nature. |
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A British historian working in America produced a vast chronicle of the Revolution which argued that its very essence was violence and slaughter. |
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It was in essence a parasite leeching on to Western decadence and lack of will. |
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Whether he truly believes it or not, he continues to project humility and the essence of a job only half done. |
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The process of transforming scraps of wood and hunks of metal into fine art is the essence of Martin's work. |
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The paschal essence is especially evident in the prayer of thanksgiving over the water. |
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The essence of the myth is that the English are standoffish, the Welsh are clannish and only the Scots and the Irish mix with anyone. |
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Claiming fusion as the essence of Nigerian modernism, the curators selected works of visual art that exhibited a hybrid character. |
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We shouldn't be surprised, as the trend has been moving towards simple, uncluttered living, which is the essence of oriental style. |
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A little deliberation shows that this is the very essence of repentance and it is known that repentance cleanses a person. |
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In either case, the question concerning the applicability of the essence remains assumed but undemonstrated. |
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Adequate doctrine must put essence and hypostasis on the same level of reality and importance. |
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The essence of the Trinity is the self-revelation of the Father through the revealing hypostases of Word and Spirit. |
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Robinson's use of analog mixing boards and guitar pedals leaves an essence of loving care to each of the eleven songs on the album. |
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A peloton turned loose on a long stretch of pavement is the essence of bicycle racing. |
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The essence of his theory is that, once the word has left the author's pen, the author has no control over its meaning. |
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Arguably, to exact revenge or punishment by means of agricultural devastation was the essence of Greek warfare. |
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I could smell the essence of perfume coming from her body, and when I touched her skin, it was incredibly soft and smooth. |
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That is because the essence of unseaworthiness as a cause of loss or damage is that the unseaworthy ship is unfit to meet the peril. |
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His writing is superbly articulate and eloquent, the essence of literary beauty. |
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So in essence we have three mythological love stories, each of which came to be emblematically linked in the Renaissance to a different art. |
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So in essence what you have to transplant into an animal is something that is a mature neurone, a mature nerve cell. |
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This important essence addresses existential feelings of loss and emptiness. |
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I can't think of a performance that encapsulated the essence of being dumped so vividly. |
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Thus, even since brute force has been held in check, the sophism has been not merely a species of evil, but the very essence of evil. |
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In essence the plaintiff was claiming that he would not have acted as he did, had he not had a valid contract. |
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In essence most of these religions have the same essence of love, brotherhood and compassion. |
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And I happen to have a bottle of aromatherapy oil distilled from the essence of myrrh. |
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Yet how does one distill the Orphic essence from its various and utterly distinctive incarnations? |
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The singing itself distills the essence of American popular music in Charles's patented style. |
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The persistence in the popular imagination of the notion of Carmen as the ultimate essence of Spanishness is troubling. |
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The essence of all these plays is in the absolute starkness, as in Noh drama or Yeats. |
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This article explores the essence of such divarications, in part drawing upon decisions made by the Victorian Mental Health Review Board. |
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In fact, the essence of vicegerency of earth demands progress in science and technology. |
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This insistence on empirical proof shows a profound misunderstanding of the essence of vitalism. |
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Both concepts are rooted in the theoretical assumptions about what constitutes the essence of urban and non-urban life. |
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Those who believe motherhood to be the unchangeable essence of the female are known as essentialists. |
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Time is of the essence and a board meeting was held yesterday in an attempt to expedite the process. |
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I made an extra special effort to capture the essence of her performance through the lens of my daughter's digital camera. |
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But she is the essence of that contemporary noise, her job is down-home, Texas spin. |
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It was in essence an animated version of the drawings in the scroll paintings. |
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The Sub-Standard uses words and pictures to capture the essence of London's worst August storms ever. |
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The essence and dynamics of this model is the contradiction between the principle of equal rights and the principle of dominance. |
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Carlos elegantly distills the essence of Peruvian Quecua waltzes usually heard with Pan flutes and cavaquinhos but here played with an accordion. |
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Water is the essence of life, and its importance to bodybuilders can't be overstressed. |
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These factors, far from being narrow technical issues, capture the essence of social evolution and advanced civilization. |
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To accentuate water as the essence of life, several synchronised swimmers perform a calming and mystical aquatic ballet. |
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This image came to represent the essence of love and romance for at least one generation, many years after it was photographed. |
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It took half an hour before a certain table of heavily peroxided girls understood what an essence was. |
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The Wicca see the cauldron as a symbol of the Goddess, the manifested essence of femininity and fertility. |
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In that innocuous sentence is some essence of this great city, this great cruel city. |
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The neo-realists distilled the essence of realist thought and then laced it with a large dose of scientific positivism. |
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The copy is supposed to resemble the original in order to capture the real and to convey the essence of the subject depicted or of its possessor. |
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Chicken pot-au-feu boasts an intensely flavored broth almost sweet with the essence of chicken. |
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Much has been written about gettering in the last 25 years or so, but in essence it all boils down to this. |
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Yet the core of Boyd's ability, the essence of his talent, is his gift for finishing. |
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Finally, he employs his deft touch with light, sweet pop to capture the essence of this album. |
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For all the occasional bouts of moderate rhetoric, pre-emptive strikes and gunboat diplomacy form the essence of this thinking. |
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He was not an innovator, but he captured the essence of a style and distilled it into the best possible expression. |
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The actor is the essence of dogginess from the optimistic expectancy in his eyes to the bounce in his cavortings. |
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The revisionists in his country are in essence reactionaries, and clearly he gave them something to react against. |
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The dizzying pace of this financial revolving door is the essence of globalization's entanglements. |
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Each group faithfully captures the swinging lilt of Ory's bands, his sense of dynamics, and the essence of his robust trombone tones. |
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The story is about cultural beliefs, which are the essence of folkloristic transmission. |
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From essence of post-rock to alternative folktronica, Partir always appear torn between minimal tendencies and over-layered effects. |
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Like the programme itself, the music has been dumbed down until it just about holds an essence of the original without any of the emotion. |
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In the Svindersvik manor, the characteristics of Swedish rococo were boiled down to their essence and even enhanced by its minute size. |
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The essence of the Sycamore experience is a soak in one of the resort's fancifully named redwood tubs. |
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The writers convincingly expose the essence and consequences of the arms race in Cold War years. |
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The essence of internationalism is co-operation, collaboration and solidarity. |
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A breech birth is the classic example, when time is of the essence to birth the baby's head. |
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In this piece, Lalique captured the essence of the art nouveau style of which he was a master. |
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Bardem's performance is astonishing, not so much in his ability to mimic a wasted body, but by capturing the essence of a lively intelligence. |
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The very essence of a specific charge is that the assignee takes possession, and is the person entitled to receive the book debts at once. |
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Another traditional Chinese medical method is to apply a herbal paste to the belly button so that its essence can be absorbed there. |
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She sang in soft, smoothing volumes, that did not seem to rise above a roar yet filled the entire room with the sweet essence of her voice. |
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The usage of contemporary words made for an easy understanding of the essence of the original work by all. |
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This essay also showcases MacDonald's ability to capture the essence of a piece of music in a few brief words. |
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Is this because he is unaware of the true essence of vernacular, the relationship between function and place? |
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But the disadvantage is the difficulty of capturing the essence of a place and responding to the vernacular architecture. |
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Where does the essence of Englishness reside and what would you suggest to someone who wanted to immerse themselves in English culture? |
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Lurking inside that generic category was a simple set of steps that is the essence of design. |
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In essence this Act prohibited non-natural additives on public-health grounds. |
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The older women are in essence sponging off the daughter, a secretary, who is marrying mainly to escape their clutches. |
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This, of course, is what in essence he had told Richardson, although in more colourful language. |
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For theologians like Aquinas and Maimonides and many others past and present, the very essence of God is his incommunicability. |
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Your greatness is not attached to your accomplishments, but rather to your soulful essence that is a gift of incomparable beauty and majesty. |
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The essence of the audience's rising ire was bluntly summarised in an incredulous question from the floor. |
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Saying that pi is 3.14 without addressing the fact that it goes on infinitely afterward overlooks the true essence of the number. |
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To tribal communities across the world, the tiger is the symbol of prosperity and fecundity and the essence of the feminine force. |
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This was an almost sacred space, within which a man communed with the very essence of his creative, spiritual vision. |
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It is the essence of stunning creativity, whether embodied in a Picasso sculpture, a Mozart opera, or a phat video game. |
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All the same, the article captured the essence of the new strains of unfolding inflationary pressures now taking hold. |
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Nevertheless, she understands the essence of the formula, and applies it in a manner that is infectious. |
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Such frivolous distinctions do not constitute the essence of religion. |
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In essence the teacher should not be so much of a demanding and domineering figure but should instead be someone who is responsively helping the student in learning. |
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A show of this range can create an intoxicating sense of mastery, fostering the illusion that one can drink in the essence of a century during an afternoon. |
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This leads me to speculate that behavioral state-related gene expression may be of essence in exploring the deep psychobiology of consciousness in therapeutic hypnosis. |
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I have known judges who have done that without any unfairness, but who have been insistent on cutting the cackle and getting to the essence of it. |
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Though just an anatomical study, it already foreshadowed the sculptor's later efforts to reveal the essence rather than merely copy outward appearances. |
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The rosebuds known as taifi to the locals are plucked when they have just opened up and before the sun's rays diminish the oils, which contain the essence of their perfume. |
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One such position was that essence and existence are modally or formally distinct, such that existence constitutes a mode or property of a thing's essence. |
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Those pioneer photographers thought that photography, through the interaction of sunlight on light-sensitive silver salts, might capture the Platonic essence of things. |
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They ended up capturing the true essence of the two of them. |
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Banning smoking in public is the very essence of illiberality. |
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But in my view such knowledge should not be imputed to the company, for the essence of the arrangement was to deprive the company improperly of a large part of its assets. |
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Of specific interest is the essence of that experience as women await or are faced with surgical intervention and the ensuing recovery, recuperation, and rehabilitation. |
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Normally I'm alright with exams, and the guy sitting to my right during last year's history mods proclaimed me to be the essence of calm and collectedness. |
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The essence of entrepreneurship is smart, calculated risk-taking. |
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The essence of the conception of Lebensraum lies in the relationship of the number and growth of the population on the one hand and the size and value of the territory on the other. |
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It displays the essence of Chopin's music that surely Fokine desired and rescues it from the sickly sentiment and yards of tulle that Les Sylphides usually heralds. |
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Bitter, icy emptiness greeted him where Juliana's essence should've been. |
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I read somewhere recently that it is often not the exact order of notes which defines the real essence of a piece of music but the feel of the sound. |
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His images are radiant with color, light and life, and his classic style of paintings evoke the very essence of some of the most delightful places on earth. |
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Singing about awful things in a beautiful carefree manner is the essence of old-school jazz and blues, and Amy Winehouse has really got the hang of it. |
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On the contrary, the alterations in essence expose the instability of the narrator's self-created literary paradise, and thus illuminate even the original. |
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By not strictly adhering to the various molds of old-time folk, blues, and country, Pajo has captured the essence of the music he once shallowly emulated. |
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He found his answer in the ancient Sanskrit poem, the Mahabharata, to find the essence of dharma. |
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Because the phones are not used as a form of entertainment and because their essence is an instrument of work, they're now in the toolkits of many Amish carpenters. |
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The spiritual guru also stressed the need to understand the essence of human self and every man or woman should have a fair knowledge about body composition. |
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Cameron is in essence assuming the role of in loco parentis in relation to almost every household in Britain. |
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What is within a chef's grasp, however, is the ability to maximize the essence of his or her dish by developing a refined sense of discernment when choosing ingredients. |
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The scent is composed around the essence of sandalwood with a hint of ginger, with top notes of Calabrian bergamot, Sicilian mandarin and Tunisian neroli. |
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On a more intellectual level, he felt a piercing fear that he would only hurt her by drawing her close, that to even be near him was draining her very essence away. |
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Obviously there have been cuts, in both characters and scenes, but what is important is that the very essence of the play, its most salient points, are preserved. |
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The excess against which Greek oracles warned was there in the essence of money. |
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Anderson captures the coal-black essence of the film magnificently. |
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Is the deliberate manipulation of a culture a threat to the very essence of man or, at the other extreme, an unfathomed source of strength for the culture which encourages it? |
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They're the essence of traditional New England Republican businessmen. |
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We have discovered anew that voluntaryism is of the essence of the Gospel. |
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Over the years his style has simplified, he says, boiling down to an essence of Moroccan style and design, which he then makes liveable and comfortable. |
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What we are looking at in essence is the underdrawing for an illuminated manuscript, an art form that we associate more with the Middle Ages than with the later Renaissance. |
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The terminology of appearance and essence in Lukacs' critique of expressionism thus echoed his analysis of the outer archaism and inner modernity of naturalism. |
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Here, his composition, line and Fauvist hues abstract the imagined essence of flowers on conspicuous stalks that may be heading on to hip and seed. |
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What is the essence of balancing the vital interests of the state, society, and individuals in classifying information on arms and military equipment? |
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This approach captures the essence of the classical liberal tradition concerning the rule of law and individualism, while avoiding some of its own ambiguities. |
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Although criticised by many at that time for being too soft, it was in essence a policy based on realism and aimed at liberating India to play a larger role in the world. |
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By formal essence Spinoza means the real and independent nature of God. |
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The essence of conspiracy is inchoate and the criminality is not to be judged merely by reference to those objectives which are actually achieved. |
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But the essence of Disraeli's genius as a courtier was his ability to make it all about her. |
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We must understand the essence of kata, not their outer appearance. |
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It's a busy kitchen where speed is of the essence and this creation was whipped up faster than you can say pan-seared fish with herb, garlic and cheese sauce! |
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In essence his submission was that those words were to be construed as being confined to torts and therefore did not include the pleaded acts of knowing assistance. |
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According to this view, computers might come to exhibit emotional behaviour, but they will never have that subjective feeling that constitutes the essence of true emotion. |
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Mao's goal was to be the most revolutionary and the most Communist, taking Lenin's war communism and Marx's momentary utopian mulling on the Paris Commune as the essence of communism. |
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The essence of a woman in all its intensity, variety and even banality is sought to be captured through the portrayal of devis and yoginis in the 70-odd paintings. |
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Senior officials will only refer to its essence in public lectures and fora perfunctorily and only in passing and concentrate more on questions of organisation. |
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Speed is certainly of the essence in the mobile registration exercise if the targeted five million voters are to be captured before the designated 21 day period elapses. |
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The sensory qualities of such an object are therefore no more than passing accidents, through which its essence is dimly and confusedly perceived. |
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It includes a variety flavoured with rose essence and sugar. |
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Snow animals head north and west, where the white stuff is celebrated by hearty souls eager to celebrate the real essence of winter at seasonal festivals. |
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Despite this, fielding gives essence to the game and entertains the fans. |
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In essence Garcia conceded that the case was prioritized and lavishly funded because it involved Spitzer. |
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Beat the butter, sugar, ground almonds and almond essence together. |
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Her hard work has paid off but she has traveled so far from her essence in the process that she feels she has lost touch with herself and lost touch with life. |
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And so we need only consider these two works in order to discover his particular view of being, essence and quiddity that specifies his philosophical thinking. |
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Like some of the greatest film performances, Hoffman manages to get the skin-deep stuff down while illuminating his character's essence at the same time. |
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Cream butter and vanilla essence in a mixing bowl until light and fluffy. |
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How Wyclif conceives of the very essence of Scripture must always be borne in mind when assessing both his exegetical principles and the theological conclusions they produce. |
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It is the essence of monopoly that the monopolist has the power to set the price of his product, which is effected by altering the amount that is supplied. |
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The Blairite essence is there in the speech, say the party's centrists. |
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The essence of popular sovereignty, on the other hand, is that the democratic will of the people should prevail over the vested interests of a powerful minority. |
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The essence of chemistry is understanding and applying chemical reactions. |
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Add vanilla essence and serve in a pancake with chocolate sauce and cream. |
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Your mission is to capture the essence of a scene, not the barren facts. |
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The cover is dominated by a shot of Hayes' monolithic bald dome, every pore seeming to ooze with the essence of the genius who created the music that lies within. |
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Notwithstanding his youth, Perceval captured the vibrant life essence in the van Gogh, putting his own stamp on the image with unique textural qualities and depth. |
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