Elliott intertwines his discussion of enhancement technologies with an examination of important issues in bioethics and philosophy. |
|
An unapologetically self-referential author, Levin constantly intertwines his own life with the story he is telling. |
|
It's a bizarre concept that intertwines issues of patriotism and sporting chauvinism. |
|
Thus the artist puts into practice real small theaters which intertwines the skills of craftsmen and artists from the Mediterranean. |
|
A wind of ionized atoms and electrons is propelled outwards from the Sun and intertwines with electric and magnetic fields in the solar system. |
|
Military education will only adapt to this changes if it permanently intertwines these two worlds. |
|
He intertwines his inner feelings with what he sees, and paints nature's statements fluidly on canvas. |
|
These synthetic geonets are a trellis that reinforces and intertwines the plants and the earth. |
|
Fortunately many countries, knowing that their future intertwines with that of their young, put children into the national equation. |
|
The truck is part of the foundation of contemporary Bedouin livelihoods, and as such, it intertwines with the other processes of modernization described in this paper. |
|
The ad is put on the Newsfeed and intertwines itself with the user's and friends activities. |
|
Theology intertwines with geopolitics—and an incipient strategic-arms race. |
|
In theory, this strongly intertwines conclusions of this group with conclusions by the two other ones. |
|
Science explores a complex reality that inexplicably intertwines our dichotomies as to what is and what should be. |
|
This gradually subsides to a haunting flute solo that soon intertwines with a counterpoint from the second flute. |
|
Set in southern Morocco, 1954, Thirst intertwines the longing of a desert village for water, the longing of Moroccans for freedom from French colonialism and the longing of a freedom fighter for love. |
|
Buy from Amazon.com, Amazon.co.ukTHIS moving book, which was published in America in February and is now coming out in Britain, intertwines two stories, one of a personal tragedy, the other of an epoch in modern medicine. |
|
As the program's new name indicates, sustainable development is at the heart of this fourth phase, which intertwines environmental, social and economic dimensions. |
|
The story intertwines reality with the realities of mental illness and an artist's imagination, which are often indistinguishable as they form an endless continuum. |
|
Combining the skill of the connoisseur and the impeccable sense of the appreciator, Bell intertwines diverse threads in a beautifully written, striking and irresistible narration. |
|
|
The bright, breezy character of this idyll is reflected in the freshness of the vocal line, and in the discreet accompaniment which gently intertwines on occasion with the voice for brief moments. |
|
However, memory is not our sole guide, for beyond recollection, it is desire that sweeps us from shape to shape, that intertwines the shapes in order to constitute the real. |
|
Analysis of such data is invaluable in showing disparities within disparities, for example, how gender intertwines with poverty or ethnicity to produce multiple disadvantages. |
|
Inside a shelter of ice, driftwood intertwines? |
|
A ribbon colored in a shade of blues intertwines to the flowers and following garland to the summit of the drawing a bow that unites it to the garland. |
|
The play also intertwines the Midsummer Eve of the title with May Day, furthering the idea of a confusion of time and the seasons. |
|