She assembles familiar ingredients in a way that satisfies the everywoman while dispiriting the adventurous. |
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She's an everywoman with her insecurities and self discoveries she makes to empower herself. |
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Lisa is an omnipotent everywoman who handles each challenge with aplomb, spirit, and bouts of tearful anger. |
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As in a good Hitchcock movie, Joanna is our everywoman in a small, safe town. |
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This is much more sophisticated than your average slacker comedy, as it features, for a change, a female protagonist, the ambiguously named everywoman, She. |
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She said her main characters, a zoo-keeper and a clothes maker, represented the urban everywoman rather than the artsy vanguard stereotypically associated with gay lifestyles. |
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They want to see their saintly everywoman enjoying a chat with a girlfriend, since they derive pleasure from their interactions on the mailing list. |
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Instead, the lot of the everyman and everywoman forms only a backdrop to the story of would-be rulers and their clashes for power. |
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But the bombshell first lady's attempt to play the everywoman during this campaign was met with some mockery. |
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Everyman and everywoman supplied with a keyboard has become a sapient op-ed opiner and obligated reader. |
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To Republicans, Palin projects the image of everywoman as antiestablishment warrior. |
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Bridget Jones is back and this time the demands of social media are set to burden the everywoman heroine with a fresh set of anxieties. |
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They need to not only satisfy the demands of professional makeup artists, but be wearable on an everyday, everywoman basis, as well. |
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The dimple-cheeked everywoman from the L'Oréal ads! |
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That reality has wrought a revolution in the salons of 30 Avenue Montaigne, hitherto a house renowned for catwalk theatrics that often distanced the clothes from the everywoman. |
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At times we see a Marian figure, at others, a water-nymph, Persephone or Everywoman, merging with flowers and fruits in constant metamorphoses. |
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Peter Karpati's Everywoman, set in Budapest, describes the final day in the life of a simple, middle-aged woman suffering from cancer. |
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Try the links to EveryWoman and Smart Kids in the Resource Center. |
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